Current:Home > NewsIn fight against blight, Detroit cracks down on business owners who illegally post signs -MarketPoint
In fight against blight, Detroit cracks down on business owners who illegally post signs
View
Date:2025-04-18 16:23:37
DETROIT (AP) — William Shaw has a message for other business owners advertising their services on illegally posted signs in Detroit: “Don’t put them up. They will come after you and your company, and they will make you pay for it.”
As part of court-ordered community service for posting hundreds of signs promoting his suburban Detroit plumbing company, Shaw is required to remove similar placards in the city.
“They’re not going to back down,” Shaw said of Detroit blight enforcement officials as he yanked signs Friday morning from utility and other poles on the city’s northwest side.
Many Detroit street corners and city neighborhoods are plastered with signs offering things like lawn services, event rentals, cash for homes — and even inexpensive health care.
Mayor Mike Duggan’s administration has been aggressive in removing blight. Over the past decade, about 25,000 vacant or abandoned structures have been demolished. The city says it also has cleared about 90,000 tons of trash and illegally dumped debris from alleys over the past four years.
The city said that from February 2022 to July 2023, it removed more than 615 “Shaw’s Plumbing” signs. William Shaw has been cited with more than 50 misdemeanors because of it.
A judge ordered Shaw to serve 40 hours of community service with the city’s Blight Remediation Division. Part of that includes removing signs illegally posted by others.
Shaw said Friday he has paid thousands of dollars in fines, but noted that “business is booming” at his shop in Melvindale, southwest of Detroit.
“I was putting up signs in the city of Detroit to promote business illegally, not knowing that I was doing that,” he told The Associated Press. “We put up a lot to promote business. We did it elsewhere in other surrounding cities, as well. And we paid fines in other surrounding cities, as well as Detroit.”
Gail Tubbs, president of the O’Hair Park Community Association, pressed the city to do something about the number of “Shaw’s Plumbing” signs. She calls illegally posted signs nuisances.
“We just don’t want it,” Tubbs said Friday as Shaw took down signs in her neighborhood. “We do not need any more visual pollution and blight in our community. Don’t want it. Don’t need it.”
Shaw said he is being made an example. Others will follow, according to the city.
“Mr. Shaw is just the first. We have a list of the top 10, top 20 violators,” said Katrina Crawley, Blight Remediation assistant director. “This is just the first of many.”
“Quality of life is an issue for all of our residents,” Crawley added, “and having nuisance signs plastered on poles where they’re not supposed to be ... is something that we want to deliver a message to the business owners. You must stop. There are legal ways to advertise your business.”
veryGood! (6928)
Related
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- NXT Stand and Deliver 2024 results: Matches, highlights from Philadelphia
- Hardwood flooring manufacturer taking over 2 West Virginia sawmills that shut down
- More Federal Money to Speed Repair of Historic Mining Harms in Pennsylvania
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Horoscopes Today, April 5, 2024
- Fashion designer finds rewarding career as chef cooking up big, happy, colorful meals
- Kamilla Cardoso formidable and immovable force for South Carolina, even when injured
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- South Carolina women’s hoops coach Dawn Staley says transgender athletes should be allowed to play
Ranking
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Why trade on GalaxyCoin contract trading?
- Final Four highlights, scores: UConn, Purdue will clash in men's title game
- Elephant attack leaves American woman dead in Zambia's Kafue National Park
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Girl, 3, ‘extremely critical’ after being shot in eye in Philadelphia, police say
- Original Superman comic from 1938 sells for $6 million at auction
- Teen Moms Maci Bookout Reveals Where Her Co-Parenting Relationship With Ryan Edwards Stands Now
Recommendation
A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
More than 300 passengers tried to evade airport security in the last year, TSA says
Donovan Clingan powering Connecticut as college basketball's 'most impactful player'
Air ambulance crew administered drug to hot air balloon pilot after crash that killed 4, report says
South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
Connecticut pulls away from Alabama in Final Four to move one win from repeat title
Caitlin Clark, Iowa shouldn't be able to beat South Carolina. But they will.
Teen Moms Maci Bookout Reveals Where Her Co-Parenting Relationship With Ryan Edwards Stands Now