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Amid poles of past, signs of the future

Despite some resistance, Pasco County's sign ordinance is being enforced to good effect.

By JAMES THORNER
Published March 26, 2004

WESLEY CHAPEL - Driving down State Road 54 between Wesley Chapel and Zephyrhills, you can't miss the signs of the past.

There's the mini storage sign on two poles. And a board advertising a welding supply company next to a sign atop a pillar trying to lure you into a carwash.

Ralph's Travel Park wants your business, judging from his pole sign. So does the hand-painted day care sign down the street.

But across the highway on SR 54, the Home Depot, despite being larger than those other businesses combined, markets itself with less: a square illuminated monument sign with a company orange and white logo.

Home Depot opened this year under the provisions of Pasco County's 11/2-year-old sign ordinance. The other businesses' signs predate the ordinance.

The difference - the clean lines of the Home Depot vs. the relative clutter next door - is striking.

The sign ordinance was one of a trio of laws designed to clean up the appearance of a county in the throes of suburbanization. Ordinances mandating more trees and landscaping, designed to buffer and beautify businesses and homes, also won approval about the same time.

"All these ordinances coming together are making Pasco a much more desirable county from a scenic perspective," said Charles Hise, a member of the group Scenic Pasco, which lobbied the county against giving the Home Depot a bigger sign last year.

New stores and businesses, even the large supercenter-style stores that occupy a city block, must live with ground-hugging monument signs usually no taller than 11 feet. Pole and pylon signs are banned.

Pasco County used to limit wall signs on the side of buildings to 300 square feet. The law cut that in half to 150 square feet. Also curtailed are a slew of less permanent signs such as balloons, banners, pennants, cardboard "snipe" signs and wheeled portable signs.

To be sure, you'll still see pole signs rising beside new shopping centers, thanks to a grandfathering clause in the law.

The Shoppes at New Tampa, a center on Bruce B. Downs Boulevard in Wesley Chapel, was approved before the ordinance was adopted. So poles proliferate.

But upcoming retailers such as a Sam's Club and Buddy Foster Chevrolet dealership on State Road 56 and a Wal-Mart Supercenter near SR 54 and Bruce B. Downs have to obey the smaller-is-better rules.

Businesses, in some cases grudgingly, are absorbing the lesson that the slap-it-up-and-they-will-come philosophy is kaput.

"There's always resistance to change: "This is the way a corporation wants it, and this is the way we want it,"' Hise said. "But I'm pleased the way the county is starting to look."

Some Scenic Pasco members were displeased with grandfathering that lets thousands of messy signs stay on major roads such as U.S. 19.

Kathryn Starkey of Scenic Pasco laments that new businesses obeying the law on U.S. 19 lose visibility to large ugly signs of their pre-existing neighbors.

And then there's the loophole, beloved of car dealerships, to festoon lots and buildings with American flags. Ever cautious about treading on First Amendment/freedom of speech issues, the county has looked the other way.

A Cumberland Farms gas station and mini mart in Land O'Lakes planted 19 flags on its roof with impunity, while county officers asked a nearby barber shop to remove a small wooden roadside sign. "It's patriotic, right?" quipped assistant county attorney Barb Wilhite.

A group of sign companies stung by the law tried to change the ordinance last fall. County commissioners would have none of it.

Improving the appearance of businesses is necessarily slow, said Dennis Smith, a Wesley Chapel member of Scenic Pasco who also sits on the Meadow Pointe Community Development District board.

"It's a little early to see a significant change. It's going to take years until people can really notice a difference," Smith said.

"Five years from now when you drive up Bruce B. Downs, it's going to look a lot different from U.S. 19."

- James Thorner covers growth and development in Pasco County. He can be reached at 813 909-4613 or toll-free 1-800-333-7505, ext. 4613. His e-mail address is thorner@sptimes.com

[Last modified March 25, 2004, 14:08:18]

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