Hollywood, Florida unleashes robocalls to fight illegal sign


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HOLLYWOOD, FL?

The city has unleashed one irritating business tactic to eliminate another.

A new robocalling campaign seeks to hassle, hound and harass out of existence those pesky signs that illegally clutter public medians with offers to buy your gold and junk cars, fix your AC or rescue you from foreclosure.

The city, this week, began placing up to 20 calls a day to each number it has collected from the signs.

"It occurred to me that they want us to call," Mayor Peter Bober said. "So, we're going to call, and keep calling, until their heads are spinning."

As far as Bober knows, Hollywood is the first South Florida city to use the robocalling technique as a sign-eradication tool: "That's something that I think we're leading the pack on."

Pembroke Pines Mayor Frank Ortis loves the notion.

"I think Mayor Bober's got a great idea," Ortis said. "Just load up their phones with messages and maybe they'll get the message."

In Pembroke Pines, code officers take down 200 of the signs a week and regularly field complaints about them. "Otherwise you'd just be plastered with signs," Ortis said.

Pembroke Pines passed an ordinance last year classifying the signs as litter and allowing a police officer to issue a notice to appear in county court to anyone caught posting the signs.

Trouble is, the ordinance is only enforceable if someone is caught in the act, said John Earle, the city's code compliance administrator.

"We spend way too many man hours and resources removing these signs," Earle said. "It's an ongoing problem for us."

In Boynton Beach, code compliance officers gathered 6,794 signs last year. And from Oct. 1 through the end of January, they collected another 1,316, said Diane Springer, the city's code compliance coordinator.

"We try to keep it under control so it doesn't become a major nuisance," Springer said. "It's a daily chore for us."

For $300, Hollywood bought a software system that allows it to automatically call a preprogrammed phone list and inundate each number with pre-recorded phone messages.

When they answer, they'll be informed that their signs were illegally placed in a public right of way and must be removed. And if they want the calls to stop, they must go to City Hall ? where they'll receive a citation ? and fill out paperwork confirming that the signs have been removed.

A lone sign in a grassy center median on Sheridan Street east of Interstate 95 on Thursday advertised "A/C Installation & Repair."

Steve Hall, who answered the phone at All American air conditioning, said he hasn't yet been on the receiving end of the city's robocalls.

"It's just that right now, the economy is so bad. We're trying to do what we can to stir up some work," Hall said. "I wish there was a place we could put a sign where it wouldn't be a bother."

The tacky signs have been a longtime pet peeve of Bober's.

In 2010, he held a city contest and awarded $500 to the person who collected the most signs in a two-month period.

"I think any person with a brain in their head does not want to see their city being littered with these signs that nobody has any intention of ever picking up," Bober said.

Bober encourages citizens to continue collecting the signs and to join the phone-pressure effort by also calling the numbers to complain.

Although offenders will be fined when they show up at City Hall ? $75 for the first offense, $150 for the second and $250 for the third ? the program is not designed to be a revenue-producing program, Bober said.

He sees it as a means of decluttering public space and freeing up code-enforcement officers so they can tend to more important city tasks.

The calls began at 8 a.m. Wednesday. After a single day, Bober said the city received numerous responses from sufficiently bothered advertisers: "We've already heard from multiple people who want the calls to stop and as quickly as possible."

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  • 2 months later...

HOLLYWOOD, FL (AP) ? The cheap signs smashed into lawns and along the corners of busy intersections are hard to miss. "We Buy Junk Cars!" ''Cash for Your House!" ''Computer Repair." The eyesores have vexed Hollywood Mayor Peter Bober for the past few years as he wastes valuable resources plucking up the signs only to watch them pop up in even greater numbers.

While stopped at a red light a few months ago, Bober studied the unsightly signs and came to a realization that would help him fight their proliferation: The criminals had left their calling cards in the form of business phone numbers.

"These people want us to call them, so let's call them so much their head spins," said Bober, who bought a $300 software program in March that makes robocalls to the businesses. The volume of calls has reached as high as 20 calls each to 90 businesses in a day.

"This is a message from the City of Hollywood Police Department," the message says, going on to say signs were placed illegally and alerting companies they will receive these phone calls until the signs are removed and the owners address the code violation."

The signs are eye-catching and cheaper than a billboard, and businesses place them mostly along the sidewalks and medians of high-traffic intersections where there are no homeowners to complain. Companies can blanket an area with signs for a few hundred dollars and have been emboldened to continue because there have been virtually no consequences.

To city officials, the signs are costly litter that require city workers to pick them up. Posting them is also a crime, a relatively minor offense that carries fines of up to $250 in Hollywood.

Bober and the company that sold Hollywood its software say they've gotten calls from other communities asking about using the software to fight the signs. A county in north Florida also uses the software to fight signs along picturesque beachfront roads.

The company that makes the calling software, Voicent, says New York City uses it to send emergency transit alerts and that the Federal Emergency Management has incorporated the robocalls in its Gulf Coast hurricane-warning system. Churches and political campaigns also use the software.

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