Easter banner denied by ordinance
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Andrew Edwards
Planning commissioners said the body did not deny permission to post
a Christian banner on the Festival of Arts ground for religious
reasons.
Instead, commissioners said the rejection had more to do with
bureaucracy.
The banner in question is a 19-foot by 14-foot banner by Laguna
artist Jeff LeFever. The artwork is meant to represent the book of
Psalms, and features a large cross over the text of Psalms written in
Hebrew.
Inside the cross are brightly colored clouds, which LeFever
described as “rising up like sweet voices to heaven.”
He said that although planning commissioners cited sign
regulations in their decision, he personally doubted that the
banner’s Christian theme was not an issue.
“That’s their spin,” LeFever said.
A smaller 5-foot by 20-foot banner advertising the 6:30 a.m.
Easter sunrise service organized by the Easter in Laguna committee
was already approved for display. The committee had the Festival of
Arts approval for the banner
The city’s sign ordinance allows arts groups, like the festival,
to display signs and banners, but groups are also required to have a
sign plan approved by the Planning Commission. The festival has not
yet had a plan approved.
Planning commissioner Bob Chapman said the decision had nothing at
all to do with religious content.
“Had there been a program in place ... I don’t see any reason why
we wouldn’t approve it,” Chapman said.
Without a plan, the board voted 4 to 1 to deny permission for the
banner.
The dissenting vote was cast by planning commissioner Norm
Grossman, since he did not want to make a decision based on
bureaucratic technicalities.
“I hate to do something like this where somebody’s getting hit
just for paperwork,” he said.
The only commissioner to address the legality of posting Christian
artwork on public grounds -- the Festival of Arts is on Laguna City
Park land -- was Anne Johnson, Grossman said.
Grossman said she is confident religious artwork cannot be posted
on the festival grounds, but could not say whether the rest of the
commission would agree.
“Whether or not the Planning Commission would have turned it down
because of separation of church and state, I don’t know,” she said.
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