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  • 28
    Mar
    2013
    2:56pm, EDT

    Giant purple octopus flounders against deadline -- and city has it painted over

    Courtesy of Inland Octopus; Matthew Zimmerman Banderas / Walla Walla Union-Bulletin / AP

    An octopus mural was painted on the front of the Inland Octopus story, left, but authorities had it painted over, right, on March 28 in the city of Walla Walla, Wash.

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Time ran out for the giant purple octopus mural Thursday morning in Walla Walla, Wash.


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    By 7 a.m. PT, the giant sea creature that once blanketed the storefront of Inland Octopus, a toy shop on the town’s Main Street, had been painted over by order of city officials because the mural was too large.

    At 22 feet wide by 29 feet tall, the mural violated the municipal wall sign size guidelines by nearly 500 square feet. City officials had given shop owner Bob Catsiff 30 days to bring the mural into full compliance with the sign code or it would abate it on his dime, a bill slated to include accrued fines that totaled about $89,000. The city hired a crew to do the work. 

    The mural has been the cause of relentless legal dispute since shortly after Catsiff commissioned it without a permit on Labor Day 2010, including a petition he filed to the U.S. Supreme Court late last year in a last-ditch effort to keep it.  


    See the giant purple octopus mural get painted over 

    Catsiff continued his fight earlier this month by arguing that other signs in the city violate the code and that the city has engaged in selective enforcement against him.

    "This is actually a very simple argument: the city has never taken enforcement action against any sign code violator though numerous violations have existed for years," Catsiff wrote in an open letter to the City Council and citizens of Walla Walla. 

    Still, city officials argued they were not contacted by Catsiff or his lawyer.  

    Meanwhile, Catsiff had lost every court decision to prove his mural was legitimate but won the support of thousands of Walla Walla citizens. 

    A Facebook page called "Save The Endangered Purple Octopus" garnered more than 5,000 likes, and users Thursday were incensed by city actions to paint over it. 

    "I can't believe that [city officials] allowed their petty bickering with a local business owner to cloud the big picture ... literally ... and caused them to do something like this that was so overwhelmingly unwanted by the majority," one user wrote.

    "It's a sad sad day but interestingly enough [sic] the ONLY part of the front of the building that was an actual sign, remains," another user posted.

    About a year ago, the state Court of Appeals in Spokane, Wash., sided with the city and rejected Catsiff's argument that the sign code infringed upon his constitutional right of free speech, the Union-Bulletin of Walla Walla reported. 

    Then, last February, the U.S. Supreme Court decided not to review that ruling, which exhausted Catsiff's appeals.

    "Though I struggle to weather the mental stress and financial burden this has caused, I shall continue fighting to preserve the mural due to overwhelming community support and my deep belief that I am right," Catsiff said. 

    65 comments

    What a waste of city resources... Dosen't the city have anything better to do? How pathetic!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: washington, sign, inland-octopus, walla-walla-washington
  • 27
    Mar
    2013
    3:58pm, EDT

    Giant purple octopus faces midnight deadline

    Courtesy of Inland Octopus

    The mural on the storefront of the Inland Octopus toy shop, which measures 638 square feet, may cease to exist after midnight Wednesday.

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The clock is ticking to decide the fate of a massive purple octopus mural in Walla Walla, Wash.


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    Follow @andrewjmach

    The giant sea creature blankets the storefront of Inland Octopus, a toy shop on the town's Main Street. And at 22 feet wide by 29 feet tall, it's nearly 500 square feet too large for a wall sign under a city ordinance.

    Now, store owner Bob Catsiff is under legal and financial pressure to paint over the octopus, or make it smaller, by midnight Wednesday or the city will do it on his dime, a bill which would include accrued violation fines, totaling about $89,000. 

    The mural has been the cause of relentless legal dispute since shortly after Catsiff commissioned it without a permit on Labor Day 2010, including a petition he filed to the U.S. Supreme Court late last year in a last-ditch effort to keep the giant mural. 

    Catsiff continued his fight earlier this month by arguing there are other signs in the city that violate the code, and the city has engaged in selective enforcement against him.

    "This is actually a very simple argument: the city has never taken enforcement action against any sign code violator though numerous violations have existed for years," Catsiff wrote in an open letter to the city council and citizens of Walla Walla. 

    Catsiff said his lawyer sent a letter to the City Attorney earlier this month regarding the selective enforcement, requesting the city's position, but he has still not heard back. 

    However, Walla Walla City Manager Nabiel Shawa told the Union-Bulletin that the city hasn’t had recent contact with Catsiff.

    “We are in a holding pattern,” Shawa said. “My hope is he will come forward and bring the sign into compliance with the city code.”

    Meanwhile, Catsiff has lost every court decision to prove his mural is legitimate as is. 

    About a year ago, the State Court of Appeals in Spokane, Wash., sided with the city's regulations and rejected Catsiff's argument that the sign code infringed upon his constitutional right of free speech, the Union-Bulletin reported. 

    Then, last February, the U.S. Supreme Court decided not to review that ruling, which exhausted Catsiff's appeals in the lawsuit he filed in late 2010.

    Shawa immediately issued a statement, saying the city intended to enforce a hearing examiner’s initial order, giving Catsiff 30 days to bring the mural into full compliance with the sign code or the city could abate it, the Union-Bulletin reported. 

    For now, Shawa said the city will decide how to proceed after the Wednesday deadline, which Catsiff seems poised to miss.  

    "Though I struggle to weather the mental stress and financial burden this has caused, I shall continue fighting to preserve the mural due to overwhelming community support and my deep belief that I am right," Catsiff said. 

    25 comments

    cut it in half, seperate the halves by a foot and PRESTO, you now have TWO signs, each being under the legal limit.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: washington, sign, inland-octopus, walla-walla-washington
  • 25
    Mar
    2013
    6:36pm, EDT

    Alabama officials probing fallen airport sign that killed boy

    A flight display sign fell over at the Birmingham, Ala., airport, striking a family and killing a child. WVTM's Paris Jackson reports.

    By Verna Gates, Reuters

    BIRMINGHAM, Alabama — Alabama authorities are investigating what caused an airport sign in a recently renovated space to fall and kill a 10-year old boy and leave his mother in serious condition.

    Heather Bresette of Overland Park, Kansas, and several of her children were pinned under a flight display sign weighing 300 to 400 pounds that fell inside the Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport as they traveled home on Friday from a spring break vacation in Florida.

    Luke Bresette, 10, was killed. His brother Sam, 8, was in good condition on Monday at the Children's of Alabama hospital, and 5-year-old brother Tyler had been released, said hospital spokeswoman Kathy Bowers.

    Heather Bresette suffered a crushed pelvis and two broken ankles, said the family's priest, Father Don Farnan of St. Thomas More parish in Kansas City, Missouri.

    "It is horrible. They are trying to pick up the pieces and go on with life. Ryan has four other children to take care of," Farnan said of Ryan Bresette, Luke's father.

    Airport officials said they would not speculate on the cause of the incident, which remained under investigation.

    The probe will include talks with contractors and subcontractors who recently updated the part of the airport where the sign was hung, airport officials said in a statement. The renovated area opened on March 13, said spokeswoman Toni Bast.

    Birmingham Mayor William Bell called for a swift review of the "horrible accident."

    "No parent should have to endure the death of their child," he said. "I have met with the father, and he is heartbroken and wants and deserves answers. I want a full report on my desk as quickly as possible."

    Ryan Bresette remembered his son on Facebook over the weekend, asking friends and family to wear their favorite sports jerseys to church in honor of his sports-loving child.

    "He was spunky and energetic and very bright. Ornery on occasions," Farnan said on Monday. "He had one of those faces, that when in trouble, you had a tough time holding him to it once he gave you that smile."

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    7 comments

    With the right lawyer, these people should own the City of Birmingham, and the airport. I've always wanted to own a city, and an airport. This was not an accident, this was pure negligence.

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    Explore related topics: accident, airport, alabama, sign, luke-bresette
  • 5
    Apr
    2012
    4:44pm, EDT

    Boston lights up problem property with highway sign

    By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Fed up with police being dispatched to a Boston home for a stabbing, drug deals and prostitution, city officials have decided to install a huge lighted sign in front of the house meant to shame the owner into action.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Boston officials parked a trailer in front of the house in the Dorchester neighborhood that is equipped with a lighted sign like those seen along highways to alert drivers to road construction. In large lighted letters the sign reads, "Designated Problem Property."


    "We’re going to do everything we can to shame these owners that are not responsive to cleaning up their properties,” Dot Joyce, a spokesman for Boston Mayor Thomas Menino told the Boston Herald, which reported on the sign Thursday.

    The landlord of the multifamily home, Ed Franco, owes the city some $2,000 for trouble with this and other properties, officials told the Herald.

    Franco’s attorney Stuart Schrier called the sign "blaming the victim," since the landlord is the one embarrassed by it. Franco has responded to all notices from the city and moved to evict residents of the property, Schrier told msnbc.com, but the process is lengthy and requires evidence to be put before a judge.

    "I think I'll call the mayor as a witness testify at trial," Schrier said, "since he has knowledge about the case." 

    It was unclear how long the sign would remain at the property.

    A representative from the mayor’s office weren’t immediately available for comment to msnbc.com.

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    1 comment

    Great Idea but the sign will either get stolen or destroyed soon.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: boston, sign, problem-property

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