Banner ball-field decision expected
- Share via
Deirdre Newman
Sponsorship banners for baseball and softball teams can hang freely
on public ball fields but must face away from nearby homes if the
City Council passes a law tonight regulating the banners.
The proposed law requires a permit to hang banners on public
baseball and softball fields, and the banners could only be displayed
on fields’ outfield fence, facing the field.
The council is considering the law in response to complaints from
the Mesa Verde Villa Homeowners Assn. that banners at California
Elementary and TeWinkle Intermediate schools make the area less
attractive.
An attorney representing the homeowners association, Dirk Petchul,
refused to comment on the issue.
But Brent Mazur, the players’ representative for Costa Mesa
National Little League, said he is relieved the city is defining the
rules. The proposed law addresses issues with banners that are not in
the city code.
“[If] it’s defined, we don’t have to worry that our Little
Leaguers are blighting anyone’s property,” Mazur said. “They can just
get out there, play ball and have fun.”
Under the ordinance, field users defined as nonprofits that
partner with the city must have at least 90% residents and open
registration, regardless of skill level, and provide an “everyone
plays” philosophy to get a permit to hang banners on public fields.
Other regulations include requirements that the banners not exceed 32
square feet and be tautly fastened to the outfield fence by at least
four contact points.
When homeowners first raised the appearance issue last summer,
leagues started taking the banners down after every game and putting
them up again for the next game. Under the proposed law, banners
would be allowed to hang during the entire baseball and softball
seasons as long as they are removed within seven days of the seasons’
close.
That sounds good to Mazur.
“I think it’s great we can leave them up for the whole season,” he
said. “That’s what our sponsors give us the money for -- so they can
be seen like in any old-time ballpark, minor league games and the
Little League World Series. That’s what baseball’s about and always
has been.”
Mayor Gary Monahan said he thought the proposed law represented
too much government meddling.
“They’ve had banners for 30 years or more -- they’ve been doing it
since I was a little kid,” Monahan said. “I may support it if that’s
what it takes, but it’s a lot of time spent over a very trivial
issue.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers government. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.