Missouri Code of State Regulations
Title 7 - MISSOURI DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Division 10 - Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission
Chapter 6 - Outdoor Advertising
Section 7 CSR 10-6.020 - Directional and Other Official Signs
Universal Citation: 7 MO Code of State Regs 10-6.020
Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 18, September 16, 2024
PURPOSE: This amendment removes unnecessary restrictive language.
(1) Definitions (see 7 CSR 10-6.015 ).
(2) Categories of Directional and Other Official Signs. Directional and other official signs include the following five (5) classes of signs:
(A)
Official signs and notices are signs and notices erected and maintained by
public officers or public agencies within their territorial or zoning
jurisdiction and pursuant to and in accordance with direction or authorization
contained in federal, state or local law for the purpose of carrying out an
official duty or responsibility. Historical markers authorized by state law and
erected by state or local government agencies or nonprofit historical societies
may be considered official signs;
(B) Public utility signs are warning signs,
informational signs, notices or markers which are customarily erected and
maintained by publicly- or privately-owned public utilities, as essential to
their operations;
(C) Service club
and religious notices are signs and notices, where erection is authorized by
law, relating to meetings of nonprofit service clubs, charitable associations
or religious services;
(D) Public
service signs are signs located on school bus stop shelters that identify the
donor, sponsor, or contributor of the shelters; contain public service messages
occupying not less than fifty percent (50%) of the area of the sign; contain no
other message; and are located on school bus shelters which are authorized or
approved by city, county, or state law, regulation, or ordinance and at places
approved by the city, county or state agency controlling the highway involved;
and
(E) Directional signs are signs
containing directional messages about public places owned or operated by
federal, state or local governments or their agencies; publicly- or
privately-owned natural phenomena, historic, cultural, scientific, educational
and religious sites; and areas of natural scenic beauty or naturally suited for
outdoor recreation, deemed by the commission to be in the interest of the
traveling public.
(3) Standards for Official Signs and Notices.
(A)
General. These signs do not include official traffic signs such as street name
signs, speed limit signs or other directional or regulatory signs.
(B) Size. There are no size
limitations.
(C) Lighting. Signs
may be illuminated subject to the restrictions of subsection (7)(C) of this
rule.
(D) Spacing. There are no
spacing limitations.
(4) Standards for Public Utility Signs.
(A) Size.
There are no size limitations.
(B)
Lighting. Signs may be illuminated subject to the restrictions of subsection
(7)(C) of this rule.
(C) Spacing.
There are no spacing limitations.
(5) Standards for Service Club and Religious Notices.
(A) Size. Any number of displays or
emblems may be secured to a single structure. Each display or emblem will not
exceed eight (8) square feet in area. Note: For multiple emblem signs to be
considered fee exempt, the total outdoor advertising display area on each side
must be less than seventy-six (76) square feet.
(B) Lighting. Signs may be illuminated
subject to the restrictions of subsection (7)(C) of this rule.
(C) Spacing. There are no spacing
limitations.
(6) Standards for Public Service Signs.
(A) Size.
Each sign may not exceed thirty-two (32) square feet in area.
(B) Lighting. Signs may be illuminated
subject to the restrictions of subsection (7)(C) of this rule.
(C) Spacing. There are no spacing limitations
except that not more than one (1) sign on each shelter shall face in any one
direction.
(7) Standards for Directional Signs. The following standards apply only to directional signs:
(A) General. The following directional signs
are not allowed: signs advertising activities that are illegal under federal or
state laws or regulations in effect at the location of those signs or at the
location of those activities; signs which obstruct or interfere with the
driver's view of approaching, merging, or intersecting traffic; signs which
move or have any animated or moving parts; signs located in rest areas,
parklands, or scenic areas; and signs not lawfully existing under section
226.550.2., RSMo, or unlawful signs under section
226.580,
RSMo;
(B) Size. No sign may exceed
the following limits: maximum area-one hundred and fifty (150) square feet;
maximum height-twenty feet (20'); and maximum length-twenty feet (20'). All
dimensions include border and trim but exclude supports;
(C) Lighting. Signs may be illuminated,
subject to the following restrictions: signs which contain, include, or are
illuminated by any flashing, intermittent, or moving lights are not allowed;
signs which are not effectively shielded so as to prevent beams or rays of
light from being directed to any portion of the traveled way of an interstate
or primary highway or which are of an intensity or brilliance as to cause glare
or to impair the vision of the driver of any motor vehicle, or which otherwise
interfere with any driver's operation of a motor vehicle are not allowed; and
no sign may be so illuminated as to interfere with the effectiveness of or
obscure an official traffic sign, device, or signal;
(D) Spacing. No directional sign may be
located within two thousand feet (2,000') of an interchange or intersection at
grade along the interstate system or freeway primary highway (measured along
the interstate or freeway primary highway from the nearest point of the
beginning or ending of pavement widening at the exit from or entrance to the
main traveled way). No directional sign may be located within two thousand feet
(2,000') of a rest area, parkland, or scenic area; no two (2) directional signs
facing the same direction of travel may be spaced less than one (1) mile apart.
Not more than three (3) directional signs facing the same direction of travel
may be erected along a single route approaching the activity or attraction.
Signs located adjacent to the interstate system will be within seventy-five
(75) air miles of the activity or attraction. Signs located adjacent to the
primary system will be within fifty (50) air miles of the activity or
attraction;
(E) Message Content.
The message on directional signs is limited to the identification of the
attraction or activity and directional messages useful to the traveler in
locating the attraction or activity, such as mileage, route numbers, or exit
numbers. Descriptive words or phrases and pictorial or photographic
representations of the activity or attraction, or its environs are not
authorized and will disqualify the sign from being maintained as a directional
sign; and
(F) Selection Method and
Criteria.
1. Criteria. Activities and
attractions qualifying for directional signing are limited to-public places
owned or operated by federal, state, or local governments or their agencies;
publicly- or privately-owned natural phenomena, historic, cultural, scientific,
educational, and religious sites; and areas of natural scenic beauty or
naturally suited for outdoor recreation.
2. Selection. To promote highway safety, the
commission determines those public and private activities and attractions that
are nationally or regionally known and of outstanding interest to the traveling
public, which qualify for directional signing. After filing an application for
a directional sign permit, the applicant may petition the commission to
determine whether or not a specific public or private activity or attraction is
eligible for directional signing. The petition may be in letter form and will
include: a statement by the owner of the activity or attraction describing the
activity or attraction and evidence that the activity or attraction is
nationally or regionally known and is of outstanding interest to the traveling
public. In the case of any publicly-owned activity or attraction, the petition
will also have the written consent or approval of the federal, state, or local
political subdivision having legal authority or control over the activity or
attraction where the authority is not the applicant requesting that the
activity or attraction be designated as eligible for directional signing. The
commission may grant the applicant, upon request, a public hearing to aid the
commission in reaching a decision of whether or not the activity or attraction
qualifies for directional signing. This hearing would be informal and would not
be subject to the procedural requirements of Chapter 536, RSMo. The commission
may require review and concurrence by the United States Secretary of
Transportation before reaching a decision. Petitions and requests for public
hearing will be in writing and addressed to the department's authorized
representative.
(8) Permits. See 7 CSR 10-6.070 for state permit requirements.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Missouri may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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