The city council finds that:
(a)
Adopting limitations on off-premises commercial solicitations in the commercial solicitation restriction district (CSRD) will aid the safety and unobstructed passage of pedestrians.
(b)
There has been a proliferation of off-premises commercial solicitations in the CSRD resulting in complaints from tourists and other pedestrians about the persistent and aggressive actions of persons approaching and trying to converse with them in order to enter into a commercial transaction.
(c)
Since the demise of the timber industry in Southeast Alaska the community of Ketchikan has worked very hard to rebuild its economy and made significant investments in the infrastructure required to make Ketchikan an attractive tourist destination and port of call. In 2006, the city issued $38.5 million in revenue bonds to finance a major renovation of its port infrastructure. The annual debt service for these bonds averages about $2.58 million. The final maturity is December 1, 2035. In July 2006, the city of Ketchikan entered into a 30-year agreement to lease a cruise ship berthing facility from Ketchikan Dock Company. The lease agreement requires a minimum lease payment of $1.8 million annually.
(d)
Tourism is an essential component of the city's economy and its tax base. Hundreds of thousands of cruise ship passengers visit the city each year and many of those visitors as well as others are concentrated within the CSRD. Its friendly small town and historic nature plays an important role in its being an attractive tourism destination and place to live, all of which is threatened by off-premises commercial solicitation in the CSRD.
(e)
This chapter is directed to the regulation, the time, place, and manner of certain limited forms of commercial speech and is not intended to regulate any form of speech other than speech designed to do no more than propose a commercial transaction.
(f)
The purpose and intent of this chapter is to protect local residents and visitors with unreasonable interference or disturbance of their peace or obstruction of their free travel from the conduct of off-premises solicitors.
(g)
This chapter is also designed to preserve and protect the economic viability of the city, the safety of the public and the attractiveness of the city as a tourist and shopping destination.
(Ord. 1814 § 1, 2016)