OPINION AND ORDER
ORRICK, District Judge.
This action raises the question whether Section 675 of the San Francisco Municipal Code (Police Code), which regulates the size and placement of signs posted on public property within the City of San Francisco, passes constitutional muster under the First Amendment.
This Court holds that it does.
I
Plaintiffs are a city resident, and Candidates’ Outdoor Graphics Service (“COGS”), a California corporation specializing in the design, fabrication, placement, and removal of temporary political signs. The defendants are the City and County of San Francisco (“the City”), and Jeffrey Lee, sued in his capacity as Director of Public Works.
Section 675 makes it unlawful for anyone to post temporary signs on public property, except on lamp posts and utility poles under the following conditions:
1. Only one copy of a single sign may be posted on a single lamp post or utility pole;
2. All corners of the sign must be affixed to the lamp post or utility pole so that the shape of the sign conforms to the shape of the post or pole to which it is attached and no part may extend or be extended beyond the face of the post or pole;
3. No sign may be longer than eleven (11) inches;
4. No sign may be affixed with glue or any other adhesive substance except tape, nor affixed in a manner that damages any structure or public property;
5. Every sign must contain on it a posting date; and
6. The sign must be removed within thirty days of the posting date.
Plaintiffs challenge only those portions of the ordinance that limit the size of temporary signs to eleven inches in height (“size limitation”), and that require temporary signs to be posted on lamp posts or utility poles, and attached to conform to the shape of the post or pole (“placement
limitation”). The Court express no opinion herein on the remaining provisions of the ordinance.
COGS was retained by the campaign committees of certain political candidates and ballot initiatives to erect temporary political posters around the City in anticipation of the general election held on November 2, 1982. It proposed to post signs of a size and in a manner contrary to the provisions of Section 675. The City informed COGS that it would remove, any signs found to be in violation of the ordinance and would impose civil and criminal sanctions on the individuals responsible for posting such signs. COGS filed the instant complaint for declaratory, injunctive, and compensatory relief, together with an application for a temporary restraining order, on September 29, 1982. At a hearing held on September 30, the Court found that the balance of hardships tipped decidedly in favor of the plaintiffs, and issued an order enjoining defendants from enforcing the provisions of Section 675. At a further hearing held on October 22,
the Court extended its injunction pending its decision on the merits of plaintiffs’ application. For the reasons stated below, the Court finds that the challenged provisions of Section 675 comport with the requirements of the First Amendment, and therefore denies plaintiffs’ application for a permanent injunction.
II
The Court is not without judicial guidance in determining the constitutionality of the challenged limitations. The Ninth Circuit has examined ordinances similar to Section 675 on three occasions. In
Baldwin v. Redwood City,
540 F.2d 1360 (9th Cir.1976), the court sustained certain provisions, and overturned others, of a comprehensive ordinance regulating the posting of temporary signs on private property. The court observed that the approach to be taken in First Amendment cases is one of “balancing” individual and governmental interests, and it articulated the following general rule:
“Incidental restrictions upon the exercise of First Amendment rights may be imposed in furtherance of a legitimate governmental interest if that interest is unrelated to suppression of expression and is substantial in relation to the restrictions imposed, and if the restrictions are no greater than necessary or essential to the protection of the governmental interest.”
Id.
at 1365. Proceeding under this principle, the court found that the provisions
of
the challenged ordinance limiting individual signs to a maximum area of 16 square feet, and limiting the aggregate area of signs on a single parcel to 80 square feet, passed constitutional muster.
Id.
at 1368. The court observed that both limitations contributed to the city’s legitimate concern for the appearance of the community, which concern was based in part on its experience with the effects of the elements, particularly the wind, on unreenforced signs of various sizes.
Id.
at 1369. Especially persuasive to the court was the fact that nei
ther limitation significantly deterred the exercise of First Amendment rights, and neither was in any way related to the content of the affected signs.
Id.
The size restrictions under consideration were deemed to be comparable to the decibel restriction upheld in
Kovacs v. Cooper,
336 U.S. 77, 69 S.Ct. 448, 93 L.Ed. 513 (1949). Because the burden imposed on free expression by the limitations was so minimal, the court indicated that generous allowances could be made for municipal preferences in the means to attain its legitimate governmental interests.
Baldwin, supra,
540 F.2d at 1369.
One year later in
Verrilli v. City of Concord,
548 F.2d 262 (9th Cir.1977), the Ninth Circuit affirmed the principle it had announced in
Baldwin.
The ordinance under consideration in
Verrilli
contained a number of provisions governing the use of political campaign signs, including a provision which limited such signs to an area of four square feet. The court affirmed the district court ruling to the effect that the limitation was unconstitutional, on the basis of the trial court’s finding that the city had not even attempted to justify its sign limitation.
Verrilli, supra,
548 F.2d at 265. However, as in
Baldwin,
the court likened size restrictions to decibel restrictions and concluded that the former may be enforced “as long as the * * * limitations are not so restrictive as to foreclose an effective exercise of First Amendment rights.”
Id.
The court’s most recent comment on the efforts of municipalities to regulate where and how political posters may be displayed is articulated in
Taxpayers for Vincent v. City Council,
682 F.2d 847 (9th Cir.1982),
prob. jur. noted,
— U.S.-, 103 S.Ct. 1180, 75 L.Ed.2d 429 (1983).
Taxpayers
concerned an ordinance prohibiting entirely the posting of signs or handbills on numerous types of public property. The court commenced its discussion with a new statement of the principles to be applied to laws regulating First Amendment rights:
“
‘First,
the law is presumptively unconstitutional and the state bears the burden of justification * * *.
Second,
the law must bear a “substantial relation” to a “weighty” governmental interest * * *. The law cannot be justified merely by the showing of some legitimate governmental interest * * *.
Third,
the law must be the least drastic means of protecting the governmental interest involved; its restrictions may be “no greater than necessary or essential to the protection of the governmental interest.” ’ ”
Id.
at 849. Applying these general principles to the ordinance at hand, the court concluded that the ordinance violated the First Amendment. The court had little difficulty with the asserted governmental interests: prevention of interference with the normal uses of public objects, prevention of visual clutter, and prevention of traffic hazards.
Id.
at 850. All of these interests in and of themselves were deemed to be “significant and weighty” or “substantial.”
Id.
at 851, 852. However, the court doubted the sincerity of the city’s commitment to its purported aesthetic interest.
Id.
at 852. Moreover, the court found no evidence demonstrating a relationship between the ordinance and the city’s purported interest in traffic safety. Most important, the city had failed, in the judgment of the court, to demonstrate that an
absolute ban
against the posting of political signs on public property was the least restrictive alternative for accomplishing its purposes.
Id.
The court suggested as an alternative to the general ban an ordinance regulating-, the size, design, and construction of posters (citing
Baldwin)
or a law instituting cleanup and removal requirements.
Id.
at 852-53.
Mindful of the relevant Ninth Circuit case law, the Court now turns to the merits of the instant application.
Applying the above principles gleaned from Ninth Circuit law to the case at bar, the Court deals
seriatim
with the governmental interests, the relationship between the limitation and the governmental inter
ests, and the restrictiveness of the limitations.
A
Under the principles set forth in
Taxpayers,
the City, which carries the burden of proving that the limitations in question are constitutional, first must demonstrate that its interests in the limitations are “weighty” or “substantial.” The governmental interests on which Section 675 is premised are set forth in subdivision (a) of the ordinance; they include: (1) aesthetics, (2) prevention of damage to public property, and (3) traffic safety.
The first and third interests have been acknowledged by the Ninth Circuit to be legitimate and substantial.
See Baldwin, supra,
540 F.2d at 1366;
Taxpayers, supra,
682 F.2d at 852. And there can be little doubt that the City retains a substantial interest as well in the protection of public property from damage.
Plaintiffs do not contest the significance of these interests in and of themselves, but, relying on certain dictum in
Taxpayers,
contend that the City is not engaged in a “comprehensive coordinated effort in its commercial and industrial areas to address other obvious contributors to an unattractive environment.” 682 F.2d at 852
quoting Metromedia Inc. v. San Diego,
453 U.S. 490, 531, 101 S.Ct. 2882, 2904, 69 L.Ed.2d 800 (1981) (Brennan, J., concurring). For this reason, plaintiffs argue, the City has failed to demonstrate that its asserted interest in aesthetics is substantial.
The Court is convinced that the City’s interest in its aesthetic environment is “substantial”
(i.e.,
sincere). The City’s Comprehensive Plan for development, a copy of which was submitted by the City as an exhibit, contains Urban Design, Recreation and Open Space, and Northeastern Waterfront elements, and addresses a variety of large- and small-scale aesthetic concerns, including: preserving architecturally/historically significant buildings and neighborhoods; regulating the scale (height and bulk) of new development projects; promoting visual harmony between older and newer structures; maintaining a unified landscape design; reenforcing the city’s distinctive topographic (hill) forms; creating view corridors to the Bay; removing dilapidated piers and bulkhead wharves along the shoreline; designing a consistent set of street furniture; selecting durable trees and shrubbery for installation on various public grounds.
Signs of every variety, not simply temporary political signs, are identified throughout the Plan as a particularly troublesome contributor to visual blight.
Section 675 is part of a larger statutory scheme to curb the street clutter caused by large, garish, clashing signs. Other code provisions regulate extensively the size and placement of signs on private property within various zoning districts,
and on public park land.
Nor are signs the only principal contributor to urban blight identified by the Plan;
overhead wiring is singled out for special attention as well.
The City currently is engaged in a project to place underground overhead utility wires. The project is complete in approximately one-third of the City.
The City has enacted a number of measures in addition to the temporary sign regulations designed to ameliorate its serious litter problem. Other code provisions make it unlawful: to throw rubbish on the ground or to sweep it from one’s dwelling into the street;
to permit litter to accumulate in front of one’s dwelling;
to stack rubbish on top of or alongside public litter receptacles;
to distribute handbills to vacant premises or premises where other handbills have not been removed;
and to maintain refuse cans on sidewalks except on collection day.
In addition, owners of vacant lots must keep them litter free;
door-to-door solicitors must so place advertisements before a dwelling that they do not blow away;
contractors must maintain construction sites in a clean and litter-free manner;
and salesmen and restauranteers must bind or contain commercial refuse to prevent its dispersal in the wind or other elements.
The evidence clearly demonstrates that the City’s interest in its visual environment is “substantial.”
B
The city next must demonstrate that the size and placement limitations bear a “substantial relation” to its asserted governmental interests. The City urges that the limitations substantially promote traffic safety by eliminating obstructions to vehicles and pedestrians, and by reducing the “distraction value” of roadside signs. Moreover, the limitations purportedly decrease the likelihood that signs will be blown down, to injure pedestrians and to blind motorists.
As the court found in
Baldwin,
this Court finds here that the size limitation bears a somewhat “attenuated” relationship to the City’s traffic safety interest.
See Baldwin, supra,
540 F.2d at 1369. There is no evidence to suggest that smaller, but nevertheless visible, signs are any less distracting than larger signs. Given the universe of distractions facing motorists on our city streets, the “distraction value” posed by temporary signs is not sufficiently significant to justify the restriction on expression.
Id.
at 1370. Similarly, while common sense suggests that all things (such as design and construction) being equal, smaller signs are less likely than larger signs to be blown down, there is no evidence to indicate that temporary signs blown free by the wind have created a particularly acute traffic problem in the City. It is clear, however, that the obstructiveness of a sign is largely a function of its size. Consequently, a size limitation of some degree is substantially related to the City’s interest in removing obstructions from the view of motorists and pedestrians.
Furthermore, the placement limitation in most respects significantly advances the City’s interest in public safety and the protection of public property. The limitation effectively proscribes the placement of posters on curbstones, benches, hydrants, bridges, walls, span wires, trees, sidewalks, lawns, and “structures” located on public property.
For the most part, placing posters at these particular locations (with the possible exception of some walls and “structures”) would be inconsistent with the nature and function of the object or area involved.
See Grayned v. City of Rockford,
408 U.S. 104, 116, 92 S.Ct. 2294, 2303, 33 L.Ed.2d 222 (1972). Plaintiffs take particular exception to the restriction prohibiting the placement of posters on span wires. In justification of the prohibition, the City has produced evidence that rain-soaked signs suspended from certain span wires may cause electrical “arcing” or create an open circuit in the municipal transit system, and that laymen cannot always determine which wires create the potential for such hazards.
Section 675 does permit placing posters on the most accessible and frequently used public space for such purposes, namely, utility poles and lamp posts, but requires signs so situated to conform to the shape of their supporting post or pole. This requirement also is substantially related to the City’s interest in eliminating obstructions from the view of pedestrians and motorists.
The City claims in addition that the size and placement limitations substantially promote its aesthetic interest, by creating “clean” sight lines and abating the visual clutter created by signs of various shapes and sizes protruding beyond the edges of their supporting posts. Moreover, windblown signs contribute to the City’s serious litter problem. The challenged limitations are substantially related to these concerns as well.
C
Taxpayers
suggests that the City finally must demonstrate that the challenged limitations are the least restrictive means available for achieving its purposes. The court, however, did not intend to apply the least restrictive means standard to limitations such as those under consideration here.
The limitations challenged here are “time, place, and manner” restrictions; they do not on their face prohibit the posting of temporary signs altogether; they simply regulate the place and manner in which they may be posted.
This observation is significant because “laws regulating time, place, or manner of speech stand on a different footing from laws prohibiting speech altogether.”
Linmark Associates, Inc. v. Township of Willingboro,
431 U.S. 85, 93, 97 S.Ct. 1614, 1618, 52 L.Ed.2d 155 (1977). Such restrictions are permissible “provided that they are justified without reference to the content of the regulated speech, that they serve a significant governmental interest, and that in so doing they leave open ample alternative channels for communication of information.”
Heffron v. International Society for Krishna Consciousness,
452 U.S. 640, 648, 101 S.Ct. 2559, 2564, 69 L.Ed.2d 298 (1981);
Virginia Board of Pharmacy v. Virginia Citizens Consumer Council, Inc.,
425 U.S. 748, 771, 96 S.Ct. 1817, 1830, 48 L.Ed.2d 346 (1976).
Notwithstanding these pronouncements by the Supreme Court, the Ninth Circuit purports to articulate a least restrictive means principle that does not distinguish between time, place, and manner restrictions, such as those found in
Baldwin
and
Verrilli,
and total prohibitions, such as the one considered in
Taxpayers.
Yet, a close reading of the cases reveals that the court has never applied that principle to the type of time, place, and manner limitations under challenge here.
In
Baldwin,
for example, in upholding the 16 and 80 square foot size limitations under consideration, the eourt observed:
“This legitimate interest [appearance of the community] might be served as well by slightly less restrictive size limitations, but such distinctions in degree become significant only when they can be said to amount to differences in kind.”
Baldwin, supra,
540 F.2d at 1369. Similarly, particularly with respect to the 80 square foot aggregate size limitation, the court concluded:
“[T]he unavailability of less restrictive alternatives [is] questionable, but the burden imposed on free speech by this restriction is so minimal that generous allowances may be made for municipal preferences.”
Id.
Clearly, the court declined to apply a strict least restrictive means standard to the limitations at issue.
The
Baldwin
eourt did not expressly indicate where the least restrictive means standard it had articulated earlier was to be applied and where it was not to be applied. However, it becomes clear later in the opinion, with respect to another portion of the challenged ordinance,
that restrictions that amount to “a virtual ban” on free speech require greater justification by the state than less drastic time, place, and manner restrictions require.
Id.
at 1370. In making this determination, the court suggested that “[t]he question is whether, on balance, a regulation * * * unduly restricts First Amendment rights.”
Id.
at 1370 n. 28. A similar sentiment was expressed by the court in
Verrilli,
the only other Ninth Circuit decision to consider time, place, and manner restrictions on
where temporary posters may be placed. There, the court stated that size limitations may be upheld as long as they are not “so restrictive as to foreclose an effective exercise of First Amendment rights.”
Verrilli, supra,
548 F.2d at 265.
Thus, the relevant inquiry is not whether less restrictive limitations might have been chosen by the City, but whether the chosen limitations are unduly restrictive.
The limitations challenged here are not so restrictive as to foreclose an effective exercise of First Amendment rights. The Court finds, from an examination of sample signs submitted by the City, that temporary signs of proper design and coloring, in compliance with the ordinance can be seen by passing motorists and pedestrians. It is true that the volume of information cannot be as great on signs within the limitations as on larger signs. Still, the message that the plaintiffs seek to convey, essentially the name of a political candidate (or ballot proposition) and the office for which he or she is campaigning, can be conveyed quite effectively on complying posters.
Moreover, lengthier messages in smaller print (even type) clearly are visible to a substantial portion of plaintiffs’ audience: pedestrians. That passersby in vehicles may be unable to read the message is not conclusive. Time, place, and manner restrictions may have the effect of limiting the number of people with whom the speaker or his message comes into contact.
See Heffron, supra
(state may confine members of a religious organization distributing literature to a booth on state fair grounds);
Kovacs, supra
(state may regulate the volume of sound emitted from a loud speaker). And plaintiffs’ -claim to motorists as a potential audience is questionable in light of the City’s substantial interest in traffic safety and the priority that road signs and traffic conditions must have in gaining motorists’ attention.
The placement limitation does not unduly burden those who wish to post temporary signs in the City. The evidence shows that there are approximately 38,000 lamp posts located throughout the City on which signs may be posted. In addition, there is a large but indeterminate number of utility (both telephone and municipal transit) poles available on which posters may be placed. When one compares what the limitation permits with what it forbids in the placement of signs, it is apparent that substantial opportunity remains for placing posters on public property.
In addition, the limitations leave open ample alternative means of communication.
See Heffron, supra,
452 U.S. at 654-55, 101 S.Ct. at 2567;
Baldwin, supra,
540 F.2d at 1368. Candidates still may distribute handbills or leaflets, canvass door-to-door (except where “no solicitation” signs are posted), or hire billboard space. Even recognizing the unique attributes of placing posters on public property for political
purposes,
alternative means remain for this kind of communication. The limitations challenged here, of course, regulate the placing of posters only on public property; anyone may post temporary political signs of any size on private property.
Finally, plaintiffs have presented no evidence to support their entirely conclusory assertions that signs of eleven inches are illegible or that the challenged limitations amount to an effective ban on placing political posters on public property.
While the Court recognizes that the City carries the ultimate burden of proving the constitutionality of its limitations, the Court must look to plaintiffs to make at least a
prima facie
showing that their speech or someone else’s speech is unduly burdened or foreclosed by the ordinance. Plaintiffs fail to make such a showing.
IY
For the reasons stated above,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that plaintiff’s application for declaratory and injunctive relief is DENIED. There is no basis in federal law to hold the City liable for compensatory damages.
The case is dismissed.