ORDER
Thеre are cross motions for summary judgment before the court. The court will grant plaintiffs motion and deny defendant’s motion for the reasons stated below.
I. Background
Plaintiff Larry Whitton asks this court to hold that certain provisions of the City of Gladstone’s (Gladstone) Sign Ordinance violate the United States Constitution’s First and Fourteenth Amendments. Whitton lives in Gladstone and also owns a business there. Whitton contends that the Sign Ordinance unconstitutionally hampers his ability to use his residential and commercial property in running and assisting others in running for political office.
Whitton’s original complaint challenged the constitutionality of the Sign Ordinance’s (1) fifteen-day durational limitation on the posting of political signs prior to an election; (2) five-day removal requirement of political signs after an election; (3) regulation of the number of political signs that could be placed in each residential or commercial lot and (4) regulation of external illumination of political signs. Whitton, at the same time he filed the complaint, also asked the court for a Tempo *1331 rary Restraining Order (TRO) and a Preliminary Injunction to allow him to post political signs that promote his candidacy for shеriff of Gladstone in violation of the Sign Ordinance.
The day before the court held a hearing on the TRO and the Preliminary Injunction, Gladstone repealed the Sign Ordinance and enacted a new one. The New Sign Ordinance removes the provision which limited the placement of all political signs 1 to one sign per candidate or issue per residential or commercial lot, restricts the total allowable square footage sign space per lot, extends the pre-election posting of signs from fifteen days to thirty days, extends the removal requirement from five to seven days and adds a section explaining the legislative purpose of the New Sign Ordinance. The New Sign Ordinance does not differ from the previous ordinance in any other respect. The court, at the TRO and Preliminary Injunction hearing, ruled in Gladstone’s favor finding that Whitton failed to show he would suffer irreparable harm if the city enforced the New Sign Ordinance.
Whitton now challenges the constitutionality of §§ 25-45, 25-46 and 25-47(b) of the New Sign Ordinance. Although the election is over, Whitton states that he plans to run for other offices in the future. 2 The relevant part of § 25-45 prohibits a residential or cоmmercial owner from placing a political sign on his or her property more than thirty days before an election to which the sign pertains. 3 The section also requires that the sign be removed within seven days after the election. Section 25-47(b) makes the owner of the property, the candidate and the chairperson of a political committee responsible for removing the signs. Section 25-46 prohibits the illumination of all political signs.
II. Motion for Summary Judgment
A. Summary Judgment Standard
A movant is entitled to summary judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c), “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Thus, the moving party bears the burden of proof.
Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Great Nat’l Corp.,
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The two requirements of Rule 56(c) are that there be (1) no genuine issue of (2) material fact. The United States Supreme Court explains that to establish a genuine issue of fact sufficient to warrant trial, the party opposing summary judgment “must do more than simply show that there is some metaphysical doubt as to the material facts.”
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
Finally, in
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
The parties agree that there are no genuine issues of material fact for a trier of fact to resolve. The present case is thus an appropriate one for the court to decide on a motion for summary judgment.
B. Durational Limitations and Removal Requirements
“Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech----” U.S. Const. amend. I. The Fourteenth Amendment, of course, secures the freedom of speech against states as well.
Burson v. Freeman,
504 U.S.-,-,
Section 25-45 of the New Sign Ordinance prohibits a residential or commercial owner from placing a political sign on his or her property more than thirty days before an elеction to which the sign pertains and requires the sign be removed within seven days of the election. Section 25-45, in essence, constitutes a complete ban on posting political signs which is temporarily lifted thirty days before an election and reinstated after an election takes place.
City of Antioch v. Candidates’ Outdoor Graphic Serv.,
1. The Appropriate Test for Analyzing Section 25-45
Gladstone argues that the appropriate test for analyzing the constitutionality of § 25^15 is the time, place and manner test. A time, place or manner test is appropriate if the restrictions are “justified without reference to the content of the regulated speech, that they are narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest, and that they leave open ample alternative channels for communication of the information.”
Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Vio
*1333
lence,
The court cannot use the time, place and manner test in analyzing the thirty-day durational limitation and the seven-day removal requirement if Gladstone regulates speech on the basis of its content. A plurality of the Supreme Court in
Metromedia, Inc. v. City of San Diego,
Section 25-45 fails both tests and is thus, not content-neutral. First, Gladstone favors commercial speech over noncommercial speech. Gladstone argues that it favors noncommercial speech over commercial speech because some commercial signs are subject to application, permit, fee or insurance requirements, but political signs are not. Gladstone does require some commercial signs to undergo several requirements that political signs do not. However, in residential areas, a homeowner may post a “For Sale” or “For Rent” sign indefinitely and post a construction sign for up to ninety days prior to construction without having to meet the application, permit, fee or insurance requirements. A homeowner may also post a sign advertising a garage sale although the parties have not provided the court with information as to whether such signs must meet any administrative requirements. Further, as discussed earlier, § 25^15 imposes a ban on political speech except during the thirty-day period before the election while allowing commercial owners to post permanent signs indefinitely. The New Sign Ordinance, thus does treat some commercial signs more favorably than political signs. In regards to removal, the political sign must be removed within seven days of the election, but a construction sign may remain standing an additional three days, or a total of ten days.
Second, assuming that the New Sign Ordinance does not treat commercial signs more favorably than noncommercial signs, § 25^5 distinguishes between permissible and impermissible signs on the basis of the signs’ content. The Supreme Court recently determined that prohibiting newsracks that distribute handbills, but not newspapers regulates on the basis of content.
City of Cincinnati v. Discovery Network, Inc.,
507 U.S. -,---,
Further, a political sign that states “Whit-ton is Honest” or “Pro-Choice” is impermissible if an election on the candidate or issue is not pending,
4
but is permissible if an elee
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tion is pending within thirty-days from the posting of the signs. Again, what distinguishes between an impermissible and a permissible sign rests upon the content of the sign.
See, Burson,
504 U.S. at -,
Gladstone points to language in
Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
The Supreme Court’s decision in
Renton v. Playtime Theaters, Inc.,
2. Section 25-45 Fails Strict Scrutiny
Whitton cites the
Burson
Court for the test to analyze a content-based regulation. The
Burson
Court states that a content-based rеgulation must be (1) necessary to serve a compelling state interest and (2) that it be narrowly drawn to achieve that interest.
Burson,
504 U.S. at-,
Gladstone argues that its interest in traffic safety and aesthetics are compelling interests. Traffic safety and aesthetics are significant interests,
Metromedia,
The restrictions also are not narrowly tailored to enhance traffic safety. Section 25-50, entitled “Legislative Purpose and Intent of Political Sign Sections” states in subsection “C” that durational limits are necessary because the severe weather conditions will аdversely affect temporary political signs creating aesthetic and safety issues. Gladstone already requires in §§ 25-10 and 25-12 that signs be clean, free from hazards and if insecure, the property owner or the person maintaining the sign must fix the sign. Gladstone has ordinances that address the same safety concerns that § 25-45 purports to address. Further, other than Gladstone’s legislative statements that the restrictions on political signs are designed to further traffic safety, Gladstone does not provide any evidence that political signs cause problems with traffic safety or that removing political signs will improve traffic safety. Once Gladstone allows political signs for thirty days, “it is difficult to imagine how prohibiting political signs at other times significantly promotes highway safety.”
Van v. Travel Info. Council,
Gladstone also has not narrowly tailored the restrictions on political signs to achieve its interest in preserving the city’s aesthetics. The city fails to show the court how its interest in aesthetics justifies a thirty-day time limit on posting political signs, but not on commercial signs. As the concurring Justices in
Metromedia
stated, “before deferring to a city’s judgment, a court must be convinced that the city is seriously and comprehensively addressing aesthetic concerns.”
Metromedia,
Regarding the seven-day removal requirement, Whitton’s interest in maintaining signs promoting his candidacy declines grеatly after the election.
Baldwin,
The facts in the present case are not those that can support content-based restrictions. In
Burson,
the Supreme Court upheld a statute that prohibited the solicitation of votes within 100 feet of a polling place even though thе statute regulated on the basis of the content of the speech.
Burson,
504 U.S. at -,
3. Section 25-45 Fails Time,
Place and Manner
Even assuming § 25-45 does not regulate speech on the basis of content, the thirty-day durational requirement would still fail the time, place and manner test. Again, a time, place or manner test requires that Gladstonе narrowly tailor significant interests and that the restrictions “leave open ample alternative channels for communication of the information.”
Clark,
Gladstone did not narrowly tailor the thirty-day durational requirement to achieve its interests in traffic safety and aesthetics. The court does not require Gladstonе to follow the least restrictive approach to meet its interests, rather, Gladstone must make sure its restrictions are narrowly tailored. The court in
Antioch
held that an ordinance
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which prohibited political signs except for a sixty-day period before the election to which the signs pertain is unconstitutional.
Antioch,
Gladstone also does not leave open adequate channels of communication. Even ignoring the importance of permanent political signs, temporary political signs offer:
special advantages to the candidate seeking public office and to the advocate promoting a particular position on a state ballot measure. These signs are relatively inexpensive means of campaigning. Their use can be localized so that certain areas which the advocate wishes especially to reach may be targeted. A candidate or partisan can use the temporary sign to place a name or an issue before the public.
City of Antioch,
The thirty-day durational requirement and seven-day removal requirements of § 25-45 do not pass strict scrutiny and to that extent, § 25^15 is unconstitutional. The thirty-day durational requirement of § 25-45 also does not pass time, place and manner scrutiny and is therefore unconstitutional for that reason as well. The only remaining provision of the New Sign Ordinance in dispute concerns illumination.
C. Illumination
Whitton wishes to erect a permanent ground sign to advertise his business and to also use the sign to promote political candidаtes. Beading §§ 25-17 and 25-38 together, one may externally illuminate a permanent sign thirty square feet in area or less unless another section states otherwise. Section 25^6 states that “no political sign in any area of any zoned use may be lit by external sources with the sole purpose to light said sign.” Thus, Whitton may erect an externally illuminated commercial sign no greater than thirty square feet in area or less on his commercial property, but not one that promotes his candidacy for office. As the court discussed earlier, such a restriction regulates speech on the basis of its content and will not withstand constitutional scrutiny in the present ease. Thus, to the extent that Gladstone allows a business to externally illuminate commercial signs on its property, Gladstone must also allow the business to externally illuminate political signs.
The New Sign Ordinance does not provide for external illumination of any sign on residential property, thus prohibiting external illumination of political signs on residential property does not regulate on the basis of content. The ban on external illumination, but still allowing internal illumination, is nar *1338 rowly tailored to meet Gladstone’s interests in traffic safety and aesthetics. Also, a ban on external illumination in residential areas still leaves open ample alternative channels for communicating Whitton’s political messages. The court refuses to not allow a business to externally illuminate similar signs that promote a political candidate or issue.
Notes
. Section 25-8 of the New Sign Ordinance defines political signs as: "Any sign promoting, supporting, or opposing any candidate, office, issue or proposition to be voted upon at any public election.”
. Thus, the case is not moot because it involves issues "capable of repetition, yet evading review.”
Moore v. Ogilvie,
. Section 25-45 entitled, “Restriction of political signs within zones," reads:
A. Political signs located in an area zoned for residential use shall not exceed two (2) feet by two (2) feet on each side. In residential areas exposed political sign face shall not exceed an aggregate gross surface area of sixty-four (64) square feet per lot. No sign within such area shall be placed or erected more than thirty (30) days prior to the election to which such sign pertains and such sign shall bе removed within seven (7) days after such election.
B. Political signs located in an area zoned for industrial or commercial use shall not exceed thirty-two (32) square feet in total and shall not have any side greater than eight (8) linear feet. In industrial and commercial areas exposed political sign face shall not exceed an aggregate gross surface area of five hundred twelve (512) square feet per lot. No sign within such area shall be placed or erected more than thirty (30) days prior to the election to which such sign pertains and such sign shall be rеmoved within seven (7) days after such election.
. There is some confusion as to whether the ordinance prohibits a homeowner or a business from posting a sign advocating, for example, a position on abortion. Whether the New Sign Ordinance bans such speech does not change the court’s analysis, the court discusses this issue only to discuss a possible contradiction within the ordinance.
Stuart Borders, who interprets and enforces the New Sign Ordinance for Gladstone, testified
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in deposition that the New Sign Ordinance allows a homeowner to post a sign advocating a position on abortion even though it is not an issue to be voted on within thirty days. If Mr. Border's reading of the New Sign Ordinance is correct, Whitton could post a sign advocating a position on abortion all year long, regardless of whether abortion is an issue the voters will decide in an upcoming election or not. This reading conflicts with § 25-45, because if abortion is an issue the voters will decide in an election, Whitton may not post a sign advocating a position on abortion until thirty days before the election and he must remove the sign within seven days after the election. Mr. Borders’ rеading would make the New Sign Ordinance impermissibly vague.
E.g., N.A.A.C.P.
v.
Button,
This reading also conflicts with the language of the New Sign Ordinance. The only permanent signs allowed in residential areas are name plate signs, real estate signs, church signs, construction signs, subdivision development signs, subdivision entrance signs and in some residential areas, ground signs. § 25-28. Gladstone also prohibits temporary signs in residential areas. § 25-39. The city does allow political signs as discussed in this Order, but political signs do not include general ideological speech under the New Sign Ordinance. Political signs include only signs that promote a "сandidate, office, issue or proposition to be voted upon at any public election.” § 25-8.
. The city recognizes this because § 25-45 limits the square footage of signs in residential areas to 64 square feet per lot and in commercial areas to 512 square feet per lot.
. Theodore Y. Blumoff, After Metromedia: Sign Controls and the First Amendment, 28 St. Louis U.L.J. 171, 195 (1984).
. Gladstone offers an affidavit that questions the effectiveness of temporary political signs, however, courts generally recognize the unique advantages that temporary political signs have over other alternatives such as canvassing, radio and television.
E.g., Baldwin,
