The City of Clearwater appeals from a judgment of the district court declaring the City’s regulation of portable signs to be in violation of the first amendment and granting injunctive relief. We rеverse.
I
The City of Clearwater is a resort community with several miles of beaches located on the west coast of Florida. Since the City relies heavily on tourism, preserving a visually attractive environment is of great importance to the community. On August 29, 1985, the City adopted a comprehensive Land Development Code which, among oth *1052 er things, regulates the location, placement, erection, alteration, extension, installation and continuation of all signs. See City of Clearwater, Fla., Land Development Code ch. 134 (1985). Seсtion 134.004 of the Code provides that the sign regulations are designed to:
3. Lessen hazardous situations, confusion and visual clutter caused by proliferation, improper placement, illumination, animation and excessive height, area and bulk of signs which compete for the attention of pedestrian and vehicular traffic.
4. Enhance the attractiveness and economic well-being of the City of Clear-water as a place to live, vacation, and conduct business.
Id. § 134.004(A)(3), (4).
The portion of the sign regulations pertaining to portable signs 1 states:
Portable Signs:
a. Not more than one (1) portable sign shall be placed on any property.
b. The sign and sign structure shall be positioned at least five (5) feet from all property lines.
с. The sign and sign structure shall not exceed six (6) feet in height in any residential zoning district or in the Limited Office District, and shall not exceed eight (8) feet in height in any other district.
d. Any portable sign with a height in exсess of three (3) feet which is strategically placed with respect to a vehicular accessway shall require the approval of the Traffic Engineer in order to ensure that sufficient cross-visibility is afforded,
e. Portable signs shall be used only as temporary signs.
Id. § 134.012(A)(7). The plaintiffs-appellees, small businesses engaged in the leasing and renting of portable signs, and merchants who use portable signs to advertisе, claim that the portable sign regulation amounts to a total ban. 2 The City does not dispute this characterization of the regulation. Shortly after the Land Development Code became effective, the plaintiffs challenged the section of the ordinance pertaining to portable signs on various constitutional grounds. On February 27, 1986, the district court granted the plaintiffs a permanent injunction and declared the portable sign regulation unconstitutional under the first amendment. 3
In evaluating the plaintiffs’ first amendment claims, the court аpplied the four-part commercial speech test set forth in
Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corp. v. Public Service Commission,
II
On appeal, the City argues that the present case is contrоlled by this court’s recent decision in
Harnish v. Manatee County,
In the present case, the City submitted evidence that portable signs are particularly unattractive and that their removal would enhance the visual quality of the community.
8
The district court nevertheless believed that the elimination of portable signs would not have a significant impact on aesthetics, and thus would not “directly advance” the governmental interest, because permanent signs and other visually unattractive structures would not also be immediately eliminated. As the Supreme Court observed in
Metromedia, Inc. v. City of San Diego,
*1054
Hamish
also compels us to conclude that the regulation is no more extensive than necessary to accomplish the City’s goals. In
Hamish,
this court held that, in the absence of evidence in the record indicating that less restrictive means exist to achieve the government’s aesthetic goals, a total ban on portable signs satisfied the fourth prong of the
Central Hudson
text.
The judgment of the district court is reversed.
Notes
. A portable sign is defined as follows:
A sign which is: (a) neither permanently anchored tо the ground nor permanently affixed to a building or structure, or (b) mounted on a trailer chassis.
City of Clearwater, Fla., Land Development Code § 137.005.
. According to the complaint, the regulations effectively prohibit portable signs in three ways:
(1) virtually none of the portable signs used in the City fall into the temporary use category;
(2) most of the portable signs used in the City are larger than the specified size limitations; and (3) the sign regulations generally limit all properties to one permitted sign, and on most of the properties using portable signs the maximum number of signs have been erected as permanent signs.
. The court also found the ordinance to be in violation of the equal protection clause, apparently because of the ordinance’s disparate treatment of portable and permanent signs.
. We note that the sign regulations contain exemptions for political and other non-commercial speech. See City of Clearwater, Fla., Land Development Code § 134.008.
. The City аlso attempted to justify the ordinance on the basis of traffic safety, but does not do so on appeal.
. As the court pointed out, permanent signs are given an extended period of time to comply with the sign regulations. See City of Clear-water, Fla., Land Development Code § 134.015.
. On the day that it granted the permanent injunction, the district court found the City in contempt for violating the court’s earlier preliminary injunction. The City also appeals this contempt order. The imposition of sanctions, however, is a prerequisite for appellate review of a contempt order,
see SEC v. Naftalin,
.
See, e.g.,
Deposition of Michael Maxwell at 53-54, 66-68; Deposition of John Richter at 23-41. As in
Hamish,
there are also photographs of portable signs in the record "confirm[ing] an unsightly visual cluster."
. In cases involving first amendment claims, an appellate court must make аn independent examination of the whole record.
Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union of United States, Inc.,
. Because the regulation passes muster under the
Central Hudson
test, the plaintiffs’ claim that the regulation violates the equal protection clause by discriminating between types of signs fails as well.
See Posadas de Puerto Rico Assoc. v. Tourism Co.,
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