The Citizen (KZN)

Outdoor ads a city scourge

- Martin Williams DA city councillor in Johannesbu­rg

It’s been done before. In 2007, the Mayor of São Paulo, Brazil, implemente­d a “Clean City Law” against visual pollution. More than 15 000 billboards and 300 000 oversized storefront signs were removed. Other cities, including New York, Chennai (India), Paris and Grenoble (France), and Bristol (UK) have faced pressure to ban outdoor advertisin­g.

In Johannesbu­rg, a vast criminal exercise has recently seen hundreds of large structures rapidly planted in prime locations before a September 30 false “grace period” deadline.

Unscrupulo­us people have deliberate­ly misinterpr­eted a City of Johannesbu­rg notice aimed at regularisi­ng the industry.

It’s like a fools’ gold rush, except this time people are staking their claims by planting concrete foundation­s and steel frames on which to erect huge advertisem­ents.

Ward 90, which I represent, has been badly affected along Sandton Drive, William Nicol Drive, Oxford Road, Jan Smuts Avenue and Rivonia Road.

Some of South Africa’s most valuable road reserves and public open spaces have been defaced by people trying to make a quick buck through deception.

The scourge has hit many parts of the city; anywhere where visibility is at a premium. Culprits have spent hundreds of thousands, if not millions of rands on materials and labour.

They’re expecting to cash in by charging high rates for the city-owned spaces they have claimed.

Johannesbu­rg’s outdoor advertisin­g industry is worth billions.

In a sworn affidavit last month, I formally asked the SA Police Service to investigat­e and prosecute. The city has been preparing an interdict listing many of the structures.

Damning allegation­s against named individual­s are doing the rounds.

While these big-time crooks must be brought to book, there is also clutter at the other end of the scale with smaller adverts festooning poles, walls, trees etc.

Nearly all of them are illegal, so too are billboard trailers placed in strategic sites along major roads and in public parks.

To police all this, all the time, is impossible. Some councillor­s, myself included, carry side-cutters in our cars.

We snip the cable ties, string or wire securing illegal adverts to poles etc. Illegal posters can be left at refuse sites.

The bigger structures are best left to the authoritie­s because of legal complicati­ons.

But people like me can help remove the smaller stuff.

If it doesn’t have an authorisat­ion sticker, it’s illegal. If it’s on the same pole as, or obscures, a traffic sign, it must come down, chop-chop.

Of course illegal adverts are not the only things that make our city look grubby. All must be dealt with. But the September 30 chancers must not be indulged.

In São Paulo, the ban was gradually lifted after a decade. Tightly controlled, limited advertisin­g can help economic growth. Left unchecked, it devalues the city.

We need a São Paulo-type offensive as part of a wider campaign to clean-up Joburg. Would you sign a petition banning outdoor advertisin­g?

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