Friday, April 1, 2022 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com • A5 Signs: Campaign signs in Gearhart getting bigger Continued from Page A1 fellow councilor and mem- bers of GEARpac2022, a political action commit- tee composed of community members and volunteer fi re- fi ghters from Gearhart. “I had previously been educated by the city admin- istrator that Gearhart does not have a political sign ordi- nance,” Cockrum said. In the formal complaint fi led by Jane and Harold Gable delivered to city elec- tion offi cer Chad Sweet, they ask that the 32-square-foot sign be removed immediately. “We ask that this illegal sign, per Gearhart’s zoning code be removed immedi- ately,” they write. “By allow- ing it to remain you are setting a precedent and other oppos- ing parties will be allowed to place banners/signs that may even be larger in size in any Gearhart city zone.” According to the city’s zoning code, temporary and permanent use signs in the neighborhood commercial zone are limited to no more than 8 square feet. The code does not have a provision for campaign signs. Gearhart’s Joy Sigler said the city has “fl ippantly set aside all city sign code claim- ing ‘political sign exemption.’ There is no adopted city code with this title.” Bob Shortman, who ran R.J. Marx Two sides of the fi rehouse bond issue in Gearhart. for mayor in 2012, said that at the time he was asked to remove a sign in support of the candidate “I was basically ignorant of the law,” Shortman said Thursday. “Within hours, there was a barrage of com- plaints to City Hall.” Shortman said he was told the sign was oversized. “I complied instantly,” Shortman said. “The last thing I want to do is have the look of doing something wrong. So I ran down there and removed the sign.” Shortman said the city had failed to address their deci- sion in 2012, in which he lost the mayoral election by fi ve votes. Jeff Bennett was the city attorney at the time. City Attorney Peter Watts said the U.S. Supreme Court has invalidated laws restrict- ing the size of political signs. The court’s decision holds that signs are an import- LETTERS TO THE EDITOR World TB Day should be a wake-up call Thursday, March 24 is World Tuberculosis Day, commemorating the approx- imately 1.5 million peo- ple killed by this horrible disease every year. In 20 years, global eff orts to erad- icate tuberculosis and other preventable diseases, led by groups like the Global Fund, have made enormous progress. The Global Fund alone has saved 44 million lives since 2002. That progress is now in jeopardy. When the world shut down to prevent the spread of COVID-19, it disrupted access to diag- nostics and treatments for tuberculosis. One million fewer people were treated for TB in 2020 than in 2019 and, for the fi rst time in a decade, annual tuberculosis deaths rose. This must serve as a wake-up call. Members of Congress, including U.S. Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, must go on the record in support of a $2 billion per year pledge at the Global Fund replenish- ment conference this year so it can continue its vitally important work. 2022 can be the year we end COVID-19 once and for all, but it must also be the year we get the world back on track to end tuber- culosis and other prevent- able diseases by ensuring everyone, everywhere has access to lifesaving tests and treatments. Michael Kalkofen Beaverton Station on higher ground is needed We retired to Gearhart after falling in love with it’s peaceful and beautiful sur- roundings, along with the friendly community. For us, safety was and is a pri- ority! We all want to feel secure that in case of crim- inal activity, fi re or medical emergency, responders are prepared and able to come to our aid. Unfortunately, Gearhart’s aging fi re and police station, built in the 1950s, are inad- equate for our full-time and volunteer responders safety needs, and most likely will not withstand a future cata- strophic event, like an earth- quake or tsunami. A new fi re/police station being located at a higher elevation, as was done with the school being moved for this reason, will provide us with the security and safety that our community needs going forward. Please vote “yes” on Measure 4-213. Brad and Georgia Wenger Gearhart Water issues should be considered at Highlands site The proposed Gear- hart Fire Station and the development of a subdivi- sion on property south of Highlands Lane concerns me a great deal. This pro- posal will only work if the Clatsop County Planning Commission and the Clat- sop County Board of Com- missioners agree that the land should be included in the Gearhart urban growth boundary. Including this land into the Gearhart urban growth boundary, is a very lengthy process with public hear- ings for concerned citizens. A pre-application county hearing with the developers and 30 neighbors met with opposition. Concerns were the elk population and but- terfl y habitat preservation areas at Shamrock Pines and the Reserve. In March 2020, War- renton adopted a morato- rium which prohibited the issuance of new water con- nections outside the incor- porated boundaries of War- renton. The Clatsop County Comprehensive Plan, Goal 10, Housing, dated March 2, board of commissioners’ agenda, indicate this water restriction for the Clatsop Plains is still in eff ect. The developers in spring 2021 realized the land could not be devel- oped unless they had Gear- hart water. The city of Gearhart has only a partial water right permit from the Oregon Water Resources Department from July 1 to Oct. 31. According to Mur- raySmith, 2016 Warrenton water master plan, Gearhart purchased an average of 4,628,833 gallons a month from May to October. Clatsop Plains commu- nities are concerned about water quality and quantity and want to initiate a mor- atorium on building homes with septic systems on less than one acre. Because Gearhart gets their drink- ing water from the Clatsop Plains aquifer, will higher housing density aff ect the city’s future water supply? There are so many issues with this land to be consid- ered. Please vote no on the Gearhart Fire Station bond measure. Deanna Mancill Gearhart ant medium of political, reli- gious, or personal messages for which there are no exact alternatives. That opinion was related to signs in a residential zone, Watts said, but should not make a fundamental diff er- ence in interpretation. “The sign causing the con- troversy in Gearhart is in a commercial zone, so the facts are not entirely the same,” he said. “The freedom to engage in political speech via sign, seems like it would be appli- cable regardless of zoning, though I can’t say that with 100% certainty.” Mitch Cogan, a retired attorney living in Gearhart who is opposed to the bond measure, said the city is “get- ting themselves in some trou- ble here and causing all kinds of consternation by taking an alternate interpretation to the sign rules now than they took a few years ago, when they wanted to take down a sign promoting the mayoral campaign of somebody who apparently they didn’t want to be mayor.” Watts’ interpretation of the Supreme Court ruling is incorrect, Cogan said. That ruling, made in 1994, stated that a city that had banned all political signs was acting unconstitutionally. “The court in no way said what Mr. Watts is saying they said, which is that you can’t regulate politi- cal signs. That’s just not accu- rate at all.” According to the Oregon Elections Division, the law does not specifi cally address the size, location or timing of political campaign signs. These may be regulated by the local jurisdiction where the sign is located. “Although this offi ce can- not generally off er advice as to the applicability of these provisions to particular loca- tions,” the Elections Divi- sion states, “there is a concern that public employees enforce such regulations in an equita- ble manner so as not to indi- cate any support or opposi- tion to political candidates or issues.” The sign situation could turn into a “tit-for-tat” thing now, Cogan said, with big- ger and bigger signs on both sides. “There’s a lot of people who are very upset about this thing on the no side, and they’re going to run out and they’re gonna buy the biggest signs they can fi nd,” Cogan said. “And I think it’s not the intent of the rules to begin with. We’ve gotten ourselves going down a troublesome path here.” Shortman said the sign at Pacifi c Way and Cottage should come down. “If it was me, I would suggest that they take the sign down because now other people are mak- ing big signs,” he said. “They should just remove the sign. We shouldn’t fl ood the town with big signs — just go back to the regular signs.” Watts said while he does not have a defi nitive action, he is trying to weigh legal considerations. “I think there is substan- tially more legal risk/liability of removing the sign versus taking no action,” Watts said. “I have advised Chad that my advice is to not take action. I know that that is not popular with some people, because I am getting emails, but that is my position until I have explained it to the City Coun- cil and they have given us instructions to the contrary.” Business Directory REAL ESTATE CONSTRUCTION B oB M c E wan c onstruction , inc . 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