Tauro, C.J.
The petitioner, John Donnelly & Sons, Inc. (Donnelly), appeals from a decree of the Superior Court affirming a decision of the Outdoor Advertising Board (the board) which denied renewal of twenty-two permits issued by the board for off-premise outdoor advertising signs maintained by Donnelly in business and industrial districts of the town of Brookline (the town). The board, in a decision dated April 5, 1973, found that the Donnelly signs were being maintained in violation of the town’s zoning and sign by-laws. Donnelly petitioned for judicial review of the board’s decision under G. L. c. 30A, § 14, and the town intervened. A judge of the Superior Court, after hearing argument, affirmed the decision of the board.
Donnelly has been engaged in the business of erecting and maintaining billboards, or what are often called off-premise or nonaccessory signs, since 1850. It owns, operates, and maintains twenty-two such billboards, all constructed prior to 1960 in nonresidential districts in Brookline. The billboards, which Donnelly leases for commercial advertising,
have been operated under permits issued annually by the board or its predecessor.
On November 16, 1967, art. XXIII (the “sign by-law”) was unanimously adopted at a Brookline town meeting. The sign by-law was approved by the Attorney General on November 30, 1967, and became effective on December 7, 1967. Section 4 of the by-law, set forth in the margin,
imposes various restrictions, including limita
tians as to size and location, on nonaccessory (off-premise) signs.* **
Section 7(a) provides that the application of the sign by-law to off-premise signs is to be postponed for a period of five years from the effective date of the by-law. This five-year grace period for the removal of nonconforming signs expired on December 7, 1972.
At a town meeting on December 13, 1971, Brookline adopted an amendment to its zoning by-law prohibiting “[a]ny advertising sign or device, including off-premise signs and non-accessory signs as defined in this By-law or the Sign By-law of the Town of Brookline” in any residential, industrial or business zone. This provision was approved by the Attorney General on January 10, 1972, and became effective on January 22, 1972.
On August 16, 1971, the executive secretary of the town informed the board of the December, 1972, deadline and requested that no permits or renewals be granted beyond that date. An adjudicatory hearing was held by the board at which both Donnelly and the town, represented by counsel, presented evidence. The board found that the zoning by-law had the effect of excluding off-premise signs from the town and assumed, as we do on appeal, that the sign by-law, although not prohibitory in terms, was in effect a prohibition of off-premise signs in the town’s business districts. It concluded that the town’s by-laws were neither an unreasonable exercise of the police power under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States nor a violation of the First Amendment, as applied to the States by the Fourteenth Amendment. Further, the board decided that the prohibition of off-premise signs in Brookline, assumed by the board to háve been enacted primarily for reasons of aesthetics, was consistent with the Massachusetts Constitution. Having upheld the by-laws, the board ruled that since Donnelly’s billboards were in violation thereof, under its regulation 9K, set forth below,
the permits for the twenty-two billboards should be denied. A Superior Court judge upheld the board decision, and we affirm.
1. The petitioner contends that the town’s prohibitory zoning and sign by-laws are invalid because they are
inconsistent with State policy as embodied in the State Constitution, art. 50 of the Amendments, the State statute, G. L. c. 93, §§ 29-33, and the board’s rules and regulations. In light of our prior decisions in the area of billboárd regulations,
we cannot agree with this contention.
The power to regulate and restrict “[advertising on public ways, in public places and on private property within public view” was conferred explicitly on the Legislature by art. 50 of the Amendments to the Constitution, adopted and ratified on November 5, 1918.
This amendment was discussed extensively in
General Outdoor Advertising Co.
v.
Department of Pub. Works,
289 Mass. 149 (1935), where this court said: “The words used to confer that power are of broad import. Plainly, advertising of the kind there described has been designated by constitutional mandate as a subject of regulatory and restrictive legislation. No restraints on that power are expressed in the article. Every consideration for the promotion of the public interests which in view of its sweeping terms may reasonably be given weight by a
lawmaking body may be taken into account and be a factor in framing regulations or restrictions.”
Id.
at 158-159.
In the exercise of .the power granted by art. 50, the Legislature enacted G. L. c. 93, §§ 29-33, which, in part, authorizes the board to adopt “rules and regulations for the proper control and restriction of billboards ... on public ways or on private property within public view of any highway, public park or reservation.” G. L. c. 93, § 29, as appearing in St. 1955, c. 584, § 4. Excluded from the operation of the regulatory scheme are on-premise signs; “signs . . . which advertise or indicate either the person occupying the premises in question or the business transacted thereon . . . .” G. L. c. 93, § 30, as appearing in St. 1945, c. 233. Although primary responsibility for regulating outdoor advertising is entrusted to the board, the Legislature “apparently recognized that the nature of the subject matter was such that it might not be adequately and appropriately controlled and supervised by general rules of State wide application, and that the physical characteristics of various cities and towns differ within such wide limits that it was deemed expedient to permit them to establish and enforce local regulations for the purpose of lessening the detrimental effect that the general welfare of the community might sustain by the erection and maintenance of billboards . . . .”
Milton
v.
Donnelly,
306 Mass. 451, 455 (1940). Accordingly, the Legislature in G. L. c. 93, § 29, provided that “[c]ities and towns may further regulate and restrict” off-premise signs in a manner not inconsistent with the State statute (G. L. c. 93, §§ 29-30) and board rules and regulations.
Our inquiry is whether Brookline’s by-laws, found by the board to have the effect of prohibiting off-premise advertising in the town, come within the power delegated to the town. To be valid, the by-laws must comply with the enabling statute.
Lanner
v.
Board of Appeal of Tewksbury,
348 Mass. 220, 228 (1964).
Caires
v.
Build
ing Comm’r of Hingham,
323 Mass. 589, 594 (1949). In the present case, the specific question is whether the local regulations are “inconsistent with principles clearly established by comprehensive State legislation or by authorized regulations.”
John Donnelly
&
Sons, Inc.
v.
Outdoor Advertising Bd.,
361 Mass. 746, 754 (1972) (hereinafter referred to as the
“Avon”
case).
In determining whether a local regulation is inconsistent with State legislation, it was said in
Commonwealth
v.
Boronas,
285 Mass. 321, 323 (1934), that “[t]he mere existence of statutory provision for some matters within the purview of the by-law will not render it invalid as repugnant to law . . . .” See
Commonwealth
v.
Goodnow,
117 Mass. 114 (1875). In
Bloom
v.
Worcester,
363 Mass. 136, 154 (1973), this court said: “As a general proposition the cases dealing with the repugnancy or inconsistency of local regulations with State statutes have given considerable latitude to municipalities, requiring a sharp conflict between the local and State provisions before the local regulation has been held invalid.” Further, it was recognized in
Milton
v.
Donnelly, supra
at 458, that the relation between the town and the State with regard to the billboard regulation is “more or less analogous to the power of the State to make regulations for certain phases of interstate commerce, which are valid until they are displaced or abrogated by an Act of Congress . . . .”
In deciding that the town’s by-laws are not inconsistent with either the State statute or the board regulations, we note initially that the Legislature has provided explicitly for local regulation of billboards and that the board, in adopting § 9K,
supra
n. 6, has left wide latitude for local action.
Avon, supra
at 752. We do not agree, as argued by Donnelly, that since G. L. c. 93, § 29, provides that the board “may require” billboards to be located in business, commercial or industrial districts, it is the State policy to permit off-premise signs in those specified areas. The word “may” is commonly used to
import discretion,
Turnpike Amusement Park, Inc.
v.
Licensing Comm’n of Cambridge,
343 Mass. 435, 437 (1962), and thus we interpret this provision as giving the board discretion to determine whether billboards should be confined to business or industrial zones and not mandating their existence in those districts.
The board, in adopting § 9K in 1969, exercised its discretion and changed its policy so as to give greater weight, to local restrictions.
Avon, supra
at 751. Although § 5 of the board regulations defines its policy as permitting outdoor advertising in areas zoned for any business, industrial or commercial activity, § 9K is to be interpreted as controlling other provisions of the regulations.
Id.
at 752. It is now, under § 9K, of no importance that the board would grant a permit in the absence of a town by-law. That board regulations generally protect billboards in business and industrial areas
is of no consequence in light of § 9K which supersedes prior regulations. “The board, in effect, has decided no longer to preempt, by its regulations, the whole field of billboard control and has left wide scope for reasonable local regulation.”
Ibid.
The fact that the town’s by-laws go beyond the board regulations by not distinguishing between residential and business districts does not
render the by-laws inconsistent with the State statutes and the board regulations.
Milton
v.
Donnelly,
306 Mass, at 458.
General Outdoor Advertising Co.
v.
Department of Pub. Works,
289 Mass. 149, 197 (1935).
Having determined that municipalities may impose more stringent regulations covering business and industrial areas than the board does, we must decide whether the town, consistent with State law, may exclude off-premise signs from those areas. As noted above, the State’s authority to regulate and restrict outdoor advertising is found in art. 50 of the Amendments to the Constitution, and this authority has been delegated in the same language to cities and towns in the last sentence of G. L. c. 93, § 29. We cannot conclude, as argued by Donnelly, that this power delegated to towns to regulate and restrict differs so substantially from the power to prohibit that the town’s by-laws should be held invalid as inconsistent with State policy.
Article 50 conferred on the Legislature plenary power to regulate and restrict outdoor advertising.
General Outdoor Advertising Co.
v.
Department of Pub. Works, supra
at 158. Although the word “prohibit” was omitted from art. 50, it was recognized that the unlimited and unqualified power to regulate and restrict can be, for practical purposes, the power to prohibit “because under such a power the thing may be so far restricted that there is nothing left of it.” 3 Debates in the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention, 1917-1918, at 661 (1918). Accord, 3 Debates at 670. The distinction between regulation and outright prohibition
is
often Considered to be a narrow one: “‘[t]hat regulation may take the character of prohibition, in proper cases, is well established by the decisions of this court . . . [citations omitted].’”
General Outdoor Advertising Co.
v.
Department of Pub. Works, supra
at 160, quoting from
United States
v.
Hill,
248 U.S. 420, 425 (1919).
It was determined in the
General Outdoor Advertising Co.
case that the power to regulate and restrict is not the
power to prohibit utterly and without bound, but that art. 50 does “enable the prohibition of advertising on private property within public view in places, areas, divisions, localities or districts, but under present conditions not generally throughout the Commonwealth.” 289 Mass, at 160.
Measured against this standard, we cannot say that a purely local ordinance prohibiting billboards within the locality, as is the case before us, is invalid.
In
General Outdoor Advertising Co. v. Department of Pub. Works, supra
at 197, a Concord billboard regulation extending to business districts, which Donnelly concedes was prohibitory in effect, was upheld by a unanimous court which found the by-law not inconsistent with the governing statute or the rules and regulations. Further, in
Milton
v.
Donnelly, supra
at 460, this court, although not faced with the question of total prohibition of all billboards, upheld a regulation that would prevent the erection of billboards exceeding five feet in height or eight feet in length in all business districts, excluding possibly a strip of land along the Neponset River. The board, in the present case, found that the above-mentioned by-laws upheld in Concord and Milton would necessitate the removal of all Donnelly’s signs in Brookline, with the possible exception of one, if such by-laws had been enacted by Brookline.
Thus, we conclude that the town’s by-laws are not inconsistent with the State law, G. L. c. 93, §§ 29-33, or board rules and regulations.
2. Donnelly contends that the town zoning and sign by-laws, which constitute a total exclusion of off-premise signs in Brookline, are both unreasonable and an impermissible exercise of the police power in violation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. We treat these arguments together as they present similar issues, for a determination of what constitutes due process, in the context of this case, depends on the reasonableness of the legislation.
We believe that the principles governing the constitutionality of a local by-law or ordinance, adopted pursuant to G. L. c. 93, § 29, are the same as those governing the constitutionality of a zoning by-law or ordinance adopted under the authority granted by The Zoning Enabling Act, G. L. c. 40A. Although the town’s by-laws are being enforced by the board and not by the town, our familiar rules are still applicable. The test for determining the constitutionality of a local zoning by-law is whether “its terms are ‘clearly arbitrary and unreasonable, having no substantial relation to the public health, safety, morals, or general welfare.’”
Turnpike Realty Co.
v.
Dedham,
362 Mass. 221, 233 (1972), quoting from
Euclid
v.
Ambler Realty Co.,
272 U. S. 365, 395 (1926). The by-law is to be presumed valid and, if its reasonableness is fairly debatable, the j'udgment of the local legislative body must be sustained.
Caires
v.
Building Comm’r of Hingham,
323 Mass. 589, 594-595 (1949). Due regard is to be accorded to the expression of the residents of the town, who we must presume are familiar with the locality and its needs.
Id.
at 597.
Milton
v.
Donnelly,
306 Mass, at 459. We will not substitute our judgment for that of the town unless its decision is shown to be arbitrary and capricious.
Ibid.
We begin our inquiry by determining whether the town by-laws bear a reasonable relation to a permissible objective of the police power. In the past courts have upheld billboard regulations, including total prohibitions, primarily on the basis of traditional police power con
cepts, such as the preservation of property values and the promotion of highway safety, and have relied only secondarily on aesthetic considerations. See
St. Louis Poster Advertising Co.
v.
St. Louis,
249 U.S. 269 (1919);
Murphy, Inc.
v.
Westport,
131 Conn. 292 (1944);
United Advertising Corp.
v.
Metuchen,
42 N.J. 1 (1964); 1, 2 R. Anderson, American Law of Zoning §§ 7.12, 7.15, 11.76 (1968, Supp. 1975), and cases cited therein; 1, 4 N. Williams, American Land Planning Law cc. 11, 118-119 (1974), and cases cited therein. The reluctance to uphold zoning regulations, including billboard controls, designed to preserve and improve the visual character of the physical environment on aesthetic grounds alone may be based on the belief that aesthetic evaluations are a matter of individual taste and are thus too subjective to be applied in any but an arbitrary and capricious manner. See, e.g.,
Mayor & City Council of Baltimore
v.
Mano Swartz, Inc.,
268 Md. 79, 86-88 (1973). Accordingly, courts have engaged in a reasoning process, often amounting to nothing more than legal fiction, in order to avoid recognizing aesthetics as an appropriate basis for the exercise of the police power. See Dukeminier, Zoning for Aesthetic Objectives: A Reappraisal, 20 Law & Contemp. Prob. 218 (1955). We feel that this approach not only obscures the basic issues but also is no longer consistent with what we perceive as the modern trend in the law.
The board in its decision assumed that the town by-laws were adopted primarily for reasons of aesthetics and we find no indication in the record of any other reason for their enactment. Although the town argues that its by-laws can be upheld on the basis of public safety and traffic control, our review of the authorities indicates, at best, conflicting support for this proposition. See, e.g., Holme, Billboards and On-Premise Signs: Regulation and Elimination under the Fifth Amendment, Institute on Planning, Zoning, and Eminent Domain 247, 263-265 (1974). Therefore, the issue squarely
before us is whether the town by-laws, adopted primarily or solely for aesthetic reasons, are within the scope of the police power. We conclude that aesthetics alone may justify the exercise of the police power; that within the broad concept of “general welfare,” cities and towns may adopt reasonable billboard regulations designed to preserve and improve their physical environment.
We live in a changing world where the law must respond to the demands of a modern society. As stated in
Euclid
v.
Ambler Realty Co.,
272 U.S. at 387, “[Wjhile the meaning
of
constitutional guaranties never varies, the scope of their application must expand or contract to meet the new. and different conditions which are constantly coming within the field of their operation.” What was deemed unreasonable in the past may now be reasonable due to changing community values. Among these changes is the growing notion that towns and cities can and should be aesthetically pleasing; that a visually satisfying environment tends to contribute to the well-being of its inhabitants. Recognizing the value of a beautiful city, the United States Supreme Court, in
Berman
v.
Parker,
348 U.S. 26 (1954), adopted the view that the general welfare embraces aesthetic considerations. “The concept of the public welfare is broad and inclusive. . . . The values it represents are spiritual as well as physical, aesthetic as well as monetary. It is within the power of the legislature to determine that the community should be beautiful as well as healthy, spacious as well as clean, well-balanced as well as carefully patrolled.”
Id.
at 33. See
Belle Terre
v.
Boraas,
416 U.S. 1 (1974). Although
Berman
involved the use of eminent domain, this expansive view of the general welfare is applicable to the zoning power.
In addition to this judicial expansion of the concept of “general welfare,” we note that our Legislature, reflecting the growing concern for the environmental quality of life, adopted art. 97 of the Amendments to the Constitution of the Commonwealth, which was ratified on November 7, 1972, in order to establish as State policy the right of the people to “the natural, scenic, historic, and esthetic qualities of their environment . . . .” This recognition of the importance of an aesthetic environment is also reflected in The Zoning Enabling Act, G. L. c. 40A, § 3, inserted by St. 1954, c. 368, § 2, which provides that zoning regulations shall be designed to “preserve and increase . . . amenities” within a city or town. Further, it is apparent from 3 Debates in the Massachusetts Convention, 1917-1918, 621-672 (1918), that art. 50 of the Amendments to the Constitution, which defines the State constitutional limitations on outdoor advertising regulation, was introduced because of a general concern that billboards were a blight on the landscape.
Id.
at 622-624. A State legislator, in introducing the amendment, said, “I am proud to say that this resolution is based largely upon aesthetic considerations, which, being translated into Anglo-Saxon, means nothing more nor less than considerations of beauty.”
Id.
at 623. Thus, we find a continuing interest in the Commonwealth in the improvement of the aesthetic environment of both cities and towns. Although these pronouncements are not determinative of the constitutionality of Brookline’s by-laws under the due process clause, they are a strong indication that citizens in this State consider visual pollution, including billboards, to be a detriment to the general welfare.
The position we announce today in no way marks a radical departure from our prior cases dealing with outdoor advertising regulation. In the 1935 case of
General Outdoor Advertising Co.
this court affirmed the proposition that outdoor advertising may be restrained in the interest of aesthetics. “Even if the rules and regula
tians of billboards and other advertising devices did not rest upon the safety of public travel and the promotion of the comfort of travellers by exclusion of undesired intrusion, we think that the preservation of scenic beauty and places of historical interest would be a sufficient support for them. Considerations of taste and fitness may be a proper basis for action in granting and in denying permits for locations for advertising devices.” 289 Mass, at 187. In
Lexington
v.
Govenar,
295 Mass. 31, 36 (1936), it was said: “Doubtless aesthetic considerations play a large part in determining that advertising signs should not be permitted in such ... [a residential district] — these would seem sufficient to exclude such a use.” In expressing the opinion that the proposed legislation establishing historic districts in the town of Nantucket was constitutional, the court noted the growing tendency to give more weight to aesthetic considerations.
Opinion of the Justices,
333 Mass. 773, 779 (1955). Further, as stated by Justice Cutter, in
Avon,
361 Mass, at 754-755 n.9: “[Governmental and constitutional power ... to restrict and regulate billboards, even principally on aesthetic grounds, has become generally established and has expanded greatly.” Admittedly, there is disagreement among the jurisdictions concerning aesthetic zoning, but we perceive a significant trend in the recent cases toward giving full recognition to aesthetics as a proper basis for land use regulations. See 1 A. Rathkopf, Zoning and Planning § 14.01 (4th ed. 1975). 1 N. Williams, American Land Planning Law c. 11 (1974). Annot., 21 A.L.R.3d 1222 (1968). For instance, Oregon adopted the approach that an ordinance based solely on aesthetics is valid, saying that “there is a growing judicial recognition of the power of a city to impose zoning restrictions which can be justified solely upon the ground that they will tend to prevent or minimize discordant and unsightly surroundings. This change in attitude is a reflection of the refinement of our tastes and the growing appreciation
of cultural values in a maturing society.”
Oregon City
v.
Hartke,
240 Ore. 35, 46-47 (1965). In a recent decision by the New Jersey Superior Court, aesthetic zoning was upheld in a case involving a total prohibition of billboards of a certain size.
Westfield Motor Sales Co.
v.
Westfield,
129 N.J. Super. 528 (1974). The court suggested that “[l]ess confusion will result if the courts accept aesthetic zoning
per se,
instead of purporting to accept it and then dismissing it as inadequate.”
Id.
at 543. See also
E.B. Elliott Advertising Co.
v.
Metropolitan Dade County,
425 F.2d 1141 (5th Cir. Fla.) cert. dismissed, 400 U.S. 805 (1970);
State
v.
Diamond Motors, Inc.,
50 Hawaii 33 (1967);
Jasper
v.
Commonwealth,
375 S.W.2d 709 (Ky. App. 1964);
Mississippi State Highway Comm’n
v.
Roberts Enterprises, Inc.,
304 So. 2d 637 (Miss. 1974);
Cromwell
v.
Ferrier,
19 N.Y.2d 263 (1967). 1 A. Rathkopf, Zoning and Planning,
supra,
and cases cited therein. Legal commentators have also argued persuasively for the acceptability of aesthetics as a permissible objective of the police power,
especially in the area of billboard regulation.
Although we conclude that aesthetic objectives may support local regulation of billboards, the question remains whether the town by-laws should be declared invalid because the means employed bear no reasonable relationship to the aim sought to be accomplished.
Mil
ton
v.
Donnelly,
306 Mass. 451, 459 (1940). In this respect, Donnelly argues that a total prohibition of off-premise signs in a town such as Brookline, which can appropriately be characterized as an urban environment, constitutes as invalid exercise of the police power. Again, we must disagree.
We have recognized, and Donnelly concedes, that prohibition of billboards is permissible in proper circumstances. See
General Outdoor Advertising Co.
v.
Department of Pub. Works,
289 Mass. 149, 160, 180, 183 (1935). Donnelly contends that a total prohibition may be reasonable in a rural community with no real business district but not in an urban community. But can we say that residents of an urban area are not entitled to the benefits of an aesthetic environment while those in a rural district are? We think not.
It is well settled that even a legitimate business or occupation may be restricted or prohibited in the public interest.
General Outdoor Advertising Co.
v.
Department of Pub. Works, supra
at 210.
Breard
v.
Alexandria,
341 U.S. 622, 632-633 (1951). For instance, in
Oregon City
v.
Hartke,
240 Ore. 35, 50 (1965), the court upheld the total exclusion of car wrecking businesses, saying that “[i]t is not irrational for those who must live in a community from day to day to plan their physical surroundings in such a way that unsightliness is minimized.” Moreover, in the area of billboard regulation, although the results have not been uniform, a city-wide prohibition of off-premise signs has been upheld in
Murphy, Inc.
v.
Westport,
131 Conn. 292 (1944),
United Advertising Corp.
v.
Metuchen,
42 N.J. 1 (1964),
United Advertising Corp.
v.
Borough of Raritan,
11 N.J. 144 (1952), and
Cromwell
v.
Ferrier,
19 N.Y. 2d 263 (1967). Contra,
Metromedia, Inc.
v.
Des Plaines,
26 111. App. 3d 942 (1975);
Norate Corp.
v.
Zoning Bd. of Adjustment,
417 Pa. 397 (1965). In addition, Hawaii enacted in 1965 a flat prohibition of all off-premise commercial advertising. Hawaii Rev. Laws § 445-112. This court, in
General Outdoor Advertising Co.
v.
Department of Pub. Works, supra
at 197, upheld a Concord by-law which had the effect of prohibiting billboards throughout the town. See also
Milton
v.
Donnelly, supra
at 460, where the court validated a stringent, if not prohibitory, billboard regulation, citing
Euclid
v.
Ambler Realty Co.,
272 U.S. 365 (1926), which upheld a zoning ordinance excluding billboards from four of the six zoning districts.
If it is reasonable totally to prohibit billboards in Concord,
General Outdoor Advertising Co.
v.
Department of Pub. Works, supra
at 197, and to prohibit billboards in residential areas,
Thomas Cusack Co.
v.
Chicago,
242 U.S. 526 (1917), we cannot say that it is arbitrary and unreasonable for Brookline to exclude billboards from its community. We believe that it is within the scope of the police power for the town to decide that its total living area should be improved so as to be more attractive to both its residents and visitors. Whether an area is urban, suburban, or rural should not be determinative of whether the residents are entitled to preserve and enhance their environment. Urban residents are not immune to ugliness. As noted by the New Jersey Superior Court in
Westfield Motor Sales Co.
v.
Westfield,
129 N.J. Super. 528, 544 (1974), “Those who live in an urban megalopolis are no strangers to the j'ungle of signs which daily compete for their attention. . . . [A] municipality may perceive that a plethora of signs of a certain size, no matter how tasteful, can have an undesirable cumulative effect upon the well-being of the entire community.” Moreover, in a densely populated area,
it is unlikely that districts are distinctively residential or business; people’s homes are often within close proximity to business areas. Thus, the quality of the living environment of these residents cannot be
improved without considering both the residential and business areas.
A city-wide prohibition of billboards can also be justified on the ground that a community has a legitimate interest in improving the aesthetic quality of its business districts, as well as its residential districts. Cf.
Schloss
v.
Jamison,
262 N.C. 108, 116-117 (1964). There is no reason why the notion of beauty should be inimical to a business area. As argued by Judge Finch in his dissent in
In re Mid-State Advertising Corp.
v.
Bond,
274 N.Y. 82 (1937), which has since become the prevailing view in New York
(Cromwell
v.
Ferrier, supra
at 268): “Perhaps factories, stores and the industrial sections of a city naturally tend to be ugly, but it does not follow that business may not be carried on amid more pleasant surroundings. Certainly any city enacting such an ordinance would present a more pleasing picture to the eye than one plastered with blatant signboards. . . . A city might well conclude that it is more likely to attract commercial enterprises and permanent residents if it improves its appearance; that its residents will gain financially by such improvement; or that the elimination of distracting and annoying billboards will add to the physical and mental well-being of its inhabitants. . . . The billboard
eyesore is in
many ways akin to annoying sounds and undesirable odors which undoubtedly can be prohibited. Although such restrictions may be more desirable in residential areas, nevertheless, their extension to business districts cannot be termed unreasonable.”
Id.
at 89. See
E.B. Elliot Advertising Co.
v.
Metropolitan Dade County,
425 F.2d 1141, 1152 (5th Cir. 1970). We agree with Judge Finch’s reasoning, for to conclude that an area is too unattractive to justify aesthetic improvement would be both unreasonable and illogical.
It is for the locality to determine the character and quality of its visual environment, and it is not the court’s function to decide which towns may preserve or improve their appearance. It is the court’s rule to set aside the
town’s determination only when it is arbitrary and capricious,
Milton
v.
Donnelly,
306 Mass. 451, 459 (1940), and in the instant case we cannot conclude that the town has acted unreasonably by excluding off-premise advertising from its borders.
Donnelly, operating for generations, has had many years to contemplate and prepare for changes in its special mode of doing business. The volume of litigation and legislation in this area here and elsewhere over the past decades has given a clear indication of the ever increasing objections to billboard advertising whether it be in rural or urban communities. Donnelly cannot now argue with persuasion that by-laws or ordinances prohibiting such signs are arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable because of the impact on its business.
Such legislative enactments reflect the growing sensitivity to the serious effect billboards havé on the aesthetics of a locality. The time has come to recognize that citizens have a right, within certain limitations, to make these decisions concerning their own communities.
Donnelly further argues that the town by-laws violate the Fourteenth Amendment in that a total exclusion of billboards constitutes an infringement of the First Amendment guaranty of freedom of speech. The board, rejecting this argument, concluded that there were no First Amendment restraints on governmental regulation of purely commercial advertising. Although the commercial speech doctrine has been clarified since the board decision, see
Bigelow
v.
Virginia,
421 U. S. 809 (1975), we are of the opinion that, despite this recent case, the
town by-laws do not amount to a deprivation of free speech.
We now recognize that commercial advertising is not stripped of all First Amendment protection.
Bigelow
v.
Virginia, supra
at 818, 826. Nonetheless, there are degrees of protection accorded speech and, depending on the circumstances, a State may legitimately regulate or even prohibit advertising if the First Amendment interest is outweighed by the governmental interest.
Id.
at 826. Unlike the
Bigelow
case, where the newspaper advertisement relating to the availability of abortions in New York was considered to be something more than a normal commercial proposal,
id.
at 821-822, the Donnelly signs were found by the board to “contain purely commercial copy.” Although off-premise signs are sometimes used for public service advertising,
this activity can be considered only as incidental to Donnelly’s primary function, the leasing of space for commercial or product advertising and not the dissemination of ideas or the communication of information. As stated by Mr. Justice Blackmun in
Bigelow,
“To the extent that commercial activity is subject to regulation, the relationship of speech to that activity may be one factor, among others, to be considered in weighing the First Amendment interest against the governmental interest alleged.”
Id.
at 826.
Regardless of the extent to which constitutional protection is afforded commercial advertising, a question left unanswered by
Bigelow, ibid.,
we believe that due to the intrusive quality of billboards,
passers-by, whether
willing or not, are compelled to see the advertisements. The advertiser’s message is thrust upon them as a captive audience in violation of the “cardinal principle . . . that no person can be compelled to listen [or hear] against his will.” T. Emerson, The System of Freedom of Expression 710 (1970). This principle was recognized by the United States Supreme Court in
Erznoznik
v.
Jacksonville,
422 U.S. 205, 209 (1975),
Bigelow
v.
Virginia, supra
at 828, and
Lehman
v.
Shaker Heights,
418 U.S. 298, 302 (1974). In
Lehman,
Mr. Justice Blackmun reaffirmed the view, first expressed in
Packer Corp.
v.
Utah,
285 U.S. 105, 110 (1932), that “viewers of billboards and streetcar signs [have] no choice or volition’ to observe such advertising and [have] the message ‘thrust upon them by all the arts and devices that skill can produce. . . . The radio can be turned off, but not so the billboard or street car placard.’” 418 U.S. at 302. Thus, we conclude that the streetcar placards in
Lehman
and the billboards in this case fall within the same category and, as such, the petitioner has no constitutional right to use billboards to “spread . . . message[s] before [a] captive audience.”
Id.
at 308. (Douglas, J., concurring.)
Further, we note that the present case is analogous to
Kovacs
v.
Cooper,
336 U.S. 77 (1949), where the Court upheld a prohibition of the use of sound trucks. The town by-laws, as was the case in
Kovacs,
do not regulate the content of ideas expressed, but rather protect individuals from highly distracting and intrusive communications. It is well established that a “State or municipality may protect individual privacy by enacting reasonable time, place, and manner regulations applicable to all speech irrespective of content.”
Erznoznik
v.
Jacksonville, supra
at 209, and cases cited. “To enforce freedom of speech in disregard of the rights of others would be harsh and arbitrary in itself.”
Kovacs
v.
Cooper, supra
at 88.
We find support for our conclusion in
Markham Advertising Co.
v.
Washington,
73 Wash. 2d 405 (1968),
where the Washington Supreme Court rejected an argument similar to the one urged by Donnelly, and decided that a State billboard regulation did not constitute a denial of free speech.
Id.
at 429. The United States Supreme Court subsequently dismissed an appeal of the
Markham
case for want of a substantial Federal question.
Markham Advertising Co.
v.
Washington,
393 U.S. 316, rehearing denied, 393 U.S. 1112 (1969).
Thus, we conclude that the petitioner’s minimal free speech interest does not outweigh the interests of the unwilling audience.
Decree affirmed.