City delays banner plane law
Jose Paul Corona
City officials say they will not enforce a new law for three weeks
that would ban aerial advertisement over Huntington Beach. They are
waiting until a judge hears a suit brought against the city alleging
the law violates 1st Amendment rights.
“We wanted to make sure that we had enough time to fully brief the
issues raised in the suit,” Assistant City Atty. Scott Field said of
delaying the law. “If we hadn’t done it quite this way, we might not
have had only a few days to respond, that would not have been
acceptable.”
The Center for Bio-Ethical Reform, a national anti-abortion group,
is suing the city claiming that a law passed by the City Council on
Sept. 2 and set to take effect this week limits its right to free
speech.
“When a city tries to ban an entire medium of expression, they are
going to violate the 1st Amendment,” said the group’s attorney,
Robert Muise. “At least now [my client’s] rights are protected until
we have a hearing.”
The group uses planes to get its anti-abortion message across
because traditional advertising methods are not available, said Gregg
Cunningham, center director and founder in a previous interview.
Newspapers, magazines and TV stations have refused to air the
group’s advertisements because of the graphic nature of the ads,
which depict aborted fetuses.
“The media is not very fond of the pro-life movement,” Muise said.
“[The media is] very had pressed to get these type of pictures into
the mass media.”
The group has used trucks with 7-foot high and 21-foot wide
billboards with increasing frequency since the law was introduced.
Those trucks often circle local middle and high schools. By filing
the suit, the group hopes to send a message to other cities that are
considering similar laws, Cunningham has said.
Cunningham is in England and could not be reached for comment.
Residents have protested the advertisements and have asked the
council to take action on the matter.
City attorneys are confident that the city will prevail in the
case because the law doesn’t target content, said Councilwoman Connie
Boardman.
“They seemed to have the idea that the ordinance was targeting
them,” Boardman said. “[But] it’s about the noise.”
The law was passed in response to years of complaints from
residents about unbearable noise pollution from the planes in the
summer months. Boardman introduced the ordinance to the council after
hearing of a similar law passed by the city of Honolulu, Hawaii, that
was upheld by the 9th U.S. Court of Appeals in San Francisco.
The group sent a letter to the council stating its intentions to
sue before the law was passed, Boardman said. The letter was
considered when discussing the ordinance, but the council felt that
the law would hold up in court if the city was sued, she added.
“People threaten litigation all the time,” Field said. “Frankly we
can’t react to everything that people threaten.”
A full hearing on the matter is expected to take place early next
month, said Diane Turner, the city’s public information officer.
“We are confident when the facts are presented that the court will
find that the ordinance is constitutional,” Field said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.