Last Monday , the Highland Heights Planning & Zoning
Commission approved a “ leasing” sign for a non-existent retail development.
....What’s up with that?
SIGNS IN HIGHLAND
HEIGHTS: THE BACKSTORY
Last year Highland Heights updated its sign ordinances. They
are pretty detailed and impose different requirements depending on the type of
sign and type of property involved. Only
political signs are exempt, for First Amendment reasons.
Anyone wanting to put up a non-political sign in the city must:
1) go the building department; 2) submit an application; 3) pay a fee; and 4)
obtain a permit from the Building Commissioner. The Commissioner is the only one authorized to
approve sign permit applications and issue sign permits.
According to Ordinance 1145.02(27), all sign permit
applications must be signed by the owner of the property where the sign is to
be erected. There is one exception for “tenants;” they can apply for a sign as
long as they provide “written consent of the owner of the building, structure or
land to which or on which the sign is to be erected” (1145.13(6)).
The Planning & Zoning Commission (P&Z) usually isn’t
involved in the sign permitting process, and when it is involved it has a very
limited role.
P&Z’s involvement isn’t triggered until after a sign permit application is filed; the application determines whether or not P&Z approval is necessary for the issuance of a sign permit.
For example, if a property owner wants to install both free-standing and attached signs on his or her property, Ordinance 1145.13(b) states that P&Z must determine,
“the necessity for (the) free-standing sign to the conduct of the business, profession or commercial activity on the site in deference to or in addition to an attached sign prior to issuance of a permit.”
Likewise, P&Z approval is required if the requested sign will violate the
city’s Zoning and Building Codes. The standard for granting a variance is a
pretty high one. P&Z can only grant variances “in instances of unnecessary
hardship” (Ordinance 1113.01). Section 1113.04 requires at least 10 day’s prior notice
and a public hearing before P&Z can act on variance requests.
Under the city’s statutory scheme, P&Z has no business
getting involved with a sign request unless and until a properly authorized
sign application has been filed with the city, and then its role is limited to
voting up or down on a dual sign or sign-related variance requests.
At least, that’s how it’s supposed to work.
THE CONTROVERSY
P&Z’s February 13th agenda contained this
item:
3. The Shoppes at Brainard Crossing, 5612 Wilson
Mills
Review Request for Variance for a Proposed Construction Sign;
Schedule Public Hearing
Review Request for Variance for a Proposed Construction Sign;
Schedule Public Hearing
The agenda didn’t disclose who made the request (developer
Lance Osborne) or specifically identify that pertained to the Catalano’s
property. (It turns out that “The
Shoppes at Brainard Crossing” is what Osborne calls his proposed mega Get-Go
development----which is kind of funny, given that the first sign that everyone will
see will be a huge “Get-Go” sign, should the development come to pass.)
Anyone looking at the P&Z agenda would (quite properly) have figured that they would have a chance to weigh in on Osborne’s sign request at an upcoming public hearing.
They might have thought that, but they would have been wrong.
Councilman Bob Mastrangelo---Council’s representative on
P&Z---reported at the February 14th Council meeting that Osborne decided to drop his variance request.
Although that should have ended P&Z’s involvement, Mastrangelo said that P&Z nevertheless went ahead, took a vote and:
Although that should have ended P&Z’s involvement, Mastrangelo said that P&Z nevertheless went ahead, took a vote and:
“…approved a sign for the Shoppes at Brainard. It’s not a construction sign. P&Z approved a (4 foot by 8 foot) leasing sign.”
Mastrangelo indicated that the sign’s purpose is really political:
it's a way of communicating with residents with regard to the as-yet undetermined
“Get-Go” related zoning issue that will appear on the November 2012 ballot.
That certainly makes more sense than calling it a "leasing sign," especially given that there are no developed retail spaces actually available for rent on the Catalano’s property.
P&Z: LOOSE
CANNONS ON DECK
After the Council meeting, I asked Building Commissioner
Dale Grabfelder for a copy of Osborne’s sign permit application. Grabfelder responded on February 16th:
“I do not as of this time have a permit application for the sign. Mr. Osborne has not submitted plans yet for permits.”
Wow. So that means P&Z acted like a loose cannon on deck, with developer
Lance Osborne at the helm, steering the boat.
P&Z didn’t have the authority to
consider Osborne’s sign request because: 1) Osborne doesn’t own the Catalano’s
property; and 2) even if he did, he never submitted a sign permit application
to the Building Commissioner, which is what kicks off the permitting
process to begin with. In addition, once Osborne
dropped his variance request, any excuse for P&Z involvement ended.
Yet P&Z went ahead and “approved” Osborne’s purported
“leasing” sign anyway.
This isn’t the first time Osborne has attempted to bypass
city ordinances in connection with his mega “Get-Go” development plan. We saw that
behavior before---repeatedly---in his attempt to rush a “Get-Go” zoning
related issue onto the ballot.
President of Council, Cathy Murphy, was not pleased.
“I do not understand why the sign was approved. It doesn’t say anything about the “Get-Go”.…without a “Get-Go” there are no “Shoppes at Brainard.” The two are together. You are telling residents only half the story….It’s premature to have a lease sign up. There won’t be any leasing if there is no “Get-Go.”
Councilman Ed Hargate agreed,
“(P&Z) shouldn’t approve anything until there has been preliminary approval of site development plans. That hasn’t been the case.”
Murphy is right. The “leasing” sign that P&Z approved is deceptive and
misleading.
Osborne has repeatedly said that his interest in developing the Catalano’s property is contingent on a mega "Get-Go" gas station and convenience store/café being installed there and that his development deal with Giant Eagle will expire before November---before a “Get-Go” related zoning issue is put on the ballot.
And, of course, none of the retail space that Osborne wants
to advertise even exists----and it may never exist if residents vote no on the
“Get-Go” zoning issue.
Fortunately for residents and the city, since P&Z doesn’t
have the authority to approve sign permits, their approval of Osborne’s
proposed leasing sign has no legal effect.
Osborne can’t erect a sign unless he first obtains a sign
permit, and he can't apply for a sign permit because he doesn't own the Catalano's property. It’s highly unlikely that the city's Building Commissioner would
approve Osborne’s sign in any case, since it is so clearly misleading to the public.
RESIDENTS SPEAK OUT IN OPPOSITION TO FRAC DRILLING IN THE
PARK
Quite a few residents attended the February 14th
Council meeting in response to agenda item #4, a resolution (once again)
authorizing Mayor Scott Coleman to sign a lease allowing Bass Energy to drill
frac gas wells in the Community Park.
In 2008, 3,607 residents voted to approve amending our city
Charter to protect the city’s parkland from,
“…commercial exploitation of the parkland’s natural resources, including gas or oil wells, logging and mining..”
3,607
residents….that’s almost 33% more residents than voted to re-elect the mayor
last November.
I expressed my
anger at seeing item #4 on the agenda and then discussed something else:
Council’s failure to exercise due diligence with regard to the new proposed
drilling lease.
The first lease
that Mayor Scott Coleman signed in 2007 was a Bass-supplied lease. It was
written to protect Bass’s rights and interests, not the city’s.
Council has not consulted with a mineral rights or drilling lease expert, nor have they added vital provisions to protect the city, including provisions addressing: default remedies, stream and ground water monitoring, the use of evaporators, the re-purposing of the wells to store toxic drilling waste, the millions of gallons of water that Bass will need to frac two gas wells, and royalties payments for other marketable minerals and gases, besides gas and oil, that Bass might obtain from the wells.
As I stated, at the end of my remarks:
Before you rush forward with a new lease, do some due diligence. Take the time to consult with a drilling lease expert .You owe it to Highland Heights residents to do that.It’s the least you can do, since apparently you won’t respect their wishes to keep gas wells out of the park.It’s the least you can do before you continue down this very foolish and dangerous path.
This is what Osborne's proposed "leasing" sign looks like |
The hearing request form that Osborne submitted, as "owner" |