Las Vegas Review-Journal

County seeking tighter mobile billboard rules

Some commission­ers see dangers, tackiness

- By Ricardo Torres-cortez Contact Ricardo Torres-cortez at rtorres@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @rickytwrit­es on Twitter.

Clark County wants to more tightly regulate mobile billboards, which are most often seen driving up and down the Strip.

The vehicles were lightly regulated in 2019 after they seemingly appeared from nowhere, becoming a distractio­n for some in the tourist corridor.

Several county commission­ers said they’d rather not allow them in the first place.

“These have no business on the Strip,” Commission­er Marilyn Kirkpatric­k said Tuesday. “I didn’t like them before, I don’t like them now. But it seems like we’re stuck with them.”

Commission­er Tick Segerblom asked county counsel if that was so: “Are we stuck with them?”

Banning them would require justificat­ion, further studies and would likely attract legal challenges on constituti­onal grounds, commission­ers were told.

The lengthy debate took place as county staff presented a traffic study and proposed regulation­s for the industry, which has five license holders who operate 86 vehicles.

The study concluded that the vehicles tend to slow down traffic, and that some have lights emitting from them that are much brighter than county code allows.

Commission­er Ross Miller used an example of one from Omega Mart that had lively motorized components and stereo and fog systems.

“The idea that we would take a corridor as important to us as the Las Vegas Strip and allow it just for advertisem­ents to what public utility, I have no idea,” he said.

The study, delayed due to the pandemic, examined a 2.6-mile area on Las Vegas Boulevard, between Tropicana Avenue and Elvis Presley Boulevard.

The county said the billboards tended to drive about 35 percent slower than the other vehicles, which translated to 10 to 15 mph. When allowed to drive in the center lane, the county said, the billboards endangered the general public when they tried changing lanes.

They were also observed to create distances between cars and near intersecti­ons, according to the report.

Some played sounds and had flashing, bright lights that could strain the eyes of passersby, the study determined.

Tuesday’s presentati­on was only a report, and county employees will go back to write an ordinance, conduct further research and meet with the business community.

Some of the proposals include capping the number of vehicles allowed on the Strip at 100, with GPS to enforce the rule.

The billboards would only be allowed to drive in the curb lane, and only show advertisem­ents on one side, toward pedestrian­s, and not toward traffic in other lanes.

The drivers would only be able to enter and exit the Strip through right turns, according to the proposed rules. Also, mobile billboard owners who only promote their own businesses are currently exempt from regulation­s; that would likely change under a new ordinance.

 ?? Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-journal file @benjaminhp­hoto ?? A mobile billboard truck drives on the Strip in late 2019. Clark County wants to more tightly regulate the billboards which can be distractin­g to drivers.
Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-journal file @benjaminhp­hoto A mobile billboard truck drives on the Strip in late 2019. Clark County wants to more tightly regulate the billboards which can be distractin­g to drivers.

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