Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 9, September 27, 2024
A.
Definitions for this Section:
(1) "Scenic
Area," means any area of particular scenic beauty or historical significance as
determined by the Federal, state or local officials having jurisdiction thereof
and includes land which has been acquired for the restoration, preservation,
and enhancement of scenic beauty.
(2) "Parkland," means any publicly owned land
which is designated or used as a public park, recreation area, wildlife or
waterfowl refuge, or historical site.
(3) "Federal or State Law," means a federal
or state constitutional provision or statute, or an ordinance, rule, or
regulation enacted or adopted by a state or federal agency or a political
subdivision pursuant to a federal or state constitution or statute.
(4) "Directional and Other Official Signs and
Notices," means only official signs and notices, public utility signs, service
club and religious notices, public service signs, and directional
signs.
(5) "Official Signs and
Notices," means signs and notices erected 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 purposes of carrying out an official duty or responsibility.
Historical markers authorized by state law and erected by state or local
government agencies or non-profit historical societies may be considered
official signs.
(6) "Public Utility
Signs," means warning signs, information signs, notices, or markers which are
customarily erected and maintained by publicly or privately owned utilities, as
essential to their operations.
(7)
"Service Club and Religious Notices," means signs and notices relating to
meetings of non-profit service clubs or charitable associations, or religious
services, which do not exceed eight square feet in area.
(8) "Directional Signs," means signs deemed
by the Department to be in the interest of the traveling public and containing
directional information about public places owned or operated by federal, state
or local government 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.
B. The
following signs are prohibited:
(1) Signs
advertising activities that are illegal under federal or state laws in effect
at the location of those signs or at the location of those
activities.
(2) Signs located in
such a manner as to obscure or otherwise interfere with the effectiveness of an
official traffic sign, signal, or device, or obstruct or interfere with the
driver's view of approaching, merging or intersecting traffic.
(3) Signs which are erected upon trees or
rocks or other natural features.
(4) Obsolete signs.
(5) Signs which are structurally unsafe or in
disrepair.
(6) Signs which move or
have any animated moving parts.
(7)
Signs located in rest areas, parklands or scenic areas.
C. Directional signs shall not exceed the
following size limits:
(1) Maximum area - one
hundred fifty square feet.
(2)
Maximum height -twenty feet.
(3)
Maximum length - twenty feet.
All dimensions include border and trim, but exclude
supports.
D.
Lighting requirements are the same as Regulation
63-347.
E. Spacing of directional signs:
(1) Each location of a directional sign must
be approved by the Department.
(2)
No directional sign may be located within two thousand feet of an interchange,
or intersection at grade along the interstate highways or freeway primary
federal-aid highways (measured along the highway from the nearest point of the
beginning or ending of pavement widening at the exit from or entrance to the
main-traveled way).
(3) No
directional sign may be located within two thousand feet of a rest area,
parkland, or scenic area.
(4) No
two directional signs facing the same direction of travel may be spaced less
than one mile apart;
(a) Not more than three
directional signs legible to the same direction of travel may be erected along
a single route approaching the activity;
(b) Signs located adjacent to an Interstate
highway must be within seventy five air miles of the activity;
(c) Signs located adjacent to a federal-aid
primary highway must be within fifty air miles of the activity.
F. Message
content--Directional Signs.
The message on directional signs shall be limited to the
identification of the attraction or activity and directional information useful
to the traveler in locating the attraction, such as mileage, route numbers, or
exit numbers. Descriptive words or phrases, and pictorial or photographic
representations of the activity or its environs are prohibited.
G. Persons or firms desiring to
construct or qualify signs as directional must first comply with the following
procedures:
(1) Submit, in writing, to the
Director of Outdoor Advertising, SCDOT, P.O. Box 191, Columbia, SC 29202, a
detailed outline of the sign. This shall include overall dimensions and message
portion of the sign to include type of construction and lighting.
(2) Application for sign must be submitted on
the form provided by the Department and must be accompanied by the appropriate
fees.
(3) Specify reasons why the
activity being advertised should be approved for directional signing.
Submission must document why the activity is regionally or nationally
known.
(4) The Department shall
consider all requests and shall consult, as necessary, with other state
agencies and local organizations possessing cultural or historical expertise in
rendering a decision.
(5) If the
Department's decision is in the affirmative, a permit and identification tag
will be issued. If the permit is denied, the applicant will be notified in
writing outlining the specific reasons for refusal. The applicant may appeal
the decision of the Department by filing written notice with the Department
within thirty days of the Department's mailing of notice to the applicant at
the address provided on the application. All appeals will be conducted in
accordance with the Administrative Procedures Act. The applicant shall bear the
burden of showing that the Department should issue the permit.
(6) All signs authorized by the Department
under this section shall be subject to maintenance standards outlined in
Regulation Section
63-350.
(7) No sign shall be authorized for a highway
if the attraction for which the sign is sought is already identified on
official signs and notices visible from that highway.