The City of Royal Oak hereby finds and declares:
A. The City of Royal Oak has a substantial interest in promoting the
public health, safety, and welfare of its citizens and visitors by
ensuring that public streets, sidewalks and rights-of-way are not
unreasonably obstructed by newsracks, that newsracks are properly
maintained, and that newsracks do not create a visual blight in the
City, especially within downtown Royal Oak.
B. In recent years, the proliferation of newsracks on downtown streets,
and particularly poorly maintained or abandoned freestanding newsracks,
has contributed to the congestion of City sidewalks, impeded the flow
of pedestrian and vehicular traffic, interfered with the use of streets,
sidewalks and public rights-of-way, presented hazards to persons and
property, resulted in visual blight, and hindered the ability of public
services such as sidewalk and street cleaning. Certain newsracks have
been placed in inappropriate locations, have been abandoned, are poorly
maintained, and have been used as trash receptacles, causing unsightly
and unsanitary clutter and litter.
C. The City of Royal Oak has a substantial interest in preserving and
protecting its unique visual and aesthetic qualities as identified
in the City of Royal Oak Master Plan. To that end, and consistent
with the Downtown Development Authority's Wayfinding Recommendations
Program Document, and the objectives of the Downtown Development Authority
and Main Street Royal Oak, it is in the best interest of the City
to take steps to solve and reduce the negative effects of this problem.
D. After conducting an extensive study and inquiry into this problem,
as documented in the Downtown Development Authority's Wayfinding
Recommendations Program Document, it has become clear that an effective
way to remedy this problem is to require that all newspapers and other
publications desiring to be sold or provided in newspaper racks on
downtown sidewalks or other public property or rights-of-way be placed
in and sold from modular units which are provided by the City at locations
commensurate with the locations at which newspapers and other publications
are currently being sold or provided.
E. The purpose of this article is therefore to accomplish the following:
(1) Provide for increased pedestrian and vehicular safety and convenience;
(2) Ensure that there is no unreasonable interference with the free flow
of pedestrian or vehicular traffic, including ingress into, or egress
from, any residence, place of business or public facility, or any
legally parked or stopped vehicles;
(3) Ensure compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act and improve passage for persons with disabilities by reducing
impediments to passage caused by poorly located newsracks;
(4) Provide reasonable access for the safe and efficient use and maintenance
of sidewalks, street lamps, traffic signs or signals, hydrants, mailboxes,
police or fire call boxes, sidewalk elevators, delivery areas, loading
zones, transit shelters, benches, waste receptacles, street trees,
planters and plant boxes, curb ramps, parking meters, and locations
used for public transportation services;
(5) Reduce visual blight, clutter and litter problems associated with
poorly maintained, improperly located or abandoned newsracks;
(6) Protect the unique aesthetic and historical attributes of the City
and its downtown;
(7) Advance the economic interests of the City's businesses and
residents, including the interests of those involved in the publication
or distribution of newspapers and news periodicals through newsracks;
and
(8) Prevent newsracks from unduly interfering with City sidewalk and
street cleaners as well as other public services, especially within
the downtown area.
F. In adopting this article, the City of Royal Oak is mindful that regulation
of newsracks implicates rights protected by the Constitutions of both
the United States and the State of Michigan. To that end, this article
was drafted and shall be applied and enforced in a manner consistent
with these constitutional rights. The content or viewpoint of the
material to be distributed through modular newsrack units shall not
be considered in administering or enforcing this article.
G. Given the limited space available and the increasing congestion on
certain public sidewalks, streets and rights-of-way within the downtown
area, the City has a substantial interest in devising a systematic
approach to newsrack placement in those locales to ensure a fair and
equitable distribution of newspapers. This objective may be achieved
by providing modular newsrack units in certain locations in the City
as identified in the Downtown Development Authority's Wayfinding
Recommendations Program Document. Utilizing newsrack units and prohibiting
freestanding newsracks will promote the City's interest in promoting
public safety, reducing visual blight and clutter, protecting the
unique aesthetic and historical attributes of the City and its downtown,
and advancing the economic interests of the City's businesses
and residents by improving the appearance of the area and resulting
in better use of space and reduced congestion.
H. A reasonable accommodation of these competing interests can be achieved
by adoption of this article, which reasonably regulates the placement
of newsracks in specified areas.
As used in this article, the following words shall be defined
as follows:
ABANDONED NEWSRACK BOX
Any newsrack box which either remains empty for more than
30 business days or contains only outdated issues based on frequency
of publication as set forth in the registration application. In case
of a labor strike or a temporary and extraordinary interruption of
distribution of publications of the newspaper or other periodical
sold or dispensed from that newsrack box, the publication shall notify
the Director in writing in order to avoid having the newsrack box
deemed abandoned.
FREESTANDING NEWSRACK
Any self-service or coin-operated box, container, storage
unit or other dispenser installed, used for, or maintained for the
display and sale or the distribution without charge of newspapers,
news periodicals or other publications, and which is not a modular
newsrack unit authorized under this article.
MODULAR NEWSRACK UNIT
A newsrack which is provided by the City for the placement
of publications to be sold or distributed in the City on public streets,
sidewalks and rights-of-way.
NEWSRACK
A newsrack box, a freestanding newsrack, or a modular newsrack
unit.
NEWSRACK BOX
The individual space within a modular newsrack unit that
dispenses one newspaper or other periodical, including the door, coin
return mechanism and associated hardware, not including any freestanding
newsrack.
PUBLICATION
Any morning, evening, special or other editions of a publication,
as well as any editions published jointly with another publisher.
REGISTERED PUBLICATION
A publication which has registered with the City to locate
its publications in one or more modular newsrack units.
The requirements of this article shall apply to all newsracks
located on public property or public streets, sidewalks or rights-of-way
within the downtown development area as defined in the DDA's
Downtown Development and Tax Increment Financing Plan. The Director
is authorized to establish guidelines for implementation of this article
in certain areas or locations within the downtown development area
and to establish dates by which modular newsrack units will be in
place and all freestanding newsracks must be removed and in compliance
with this article, in each area or location. The deadlines for compliance
with this article and the Director's guidelines shall be mailed
by first-class mail to each affected publication at least 30 days
prior to the implementation date in each location. These deadlines
shall also be published in a newspaper of general circulation in the
City at least 30 days prior to the implementation date in each location.