Working under a bad sign
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Deepa Bharath
Bob Kost has a big problem with signs.
The 77-year-old volunteer for the Newport Beach Police Department does
not agree with all those people who use city property as their personal
notice boards.
“These signs are ugly,” Kost raves about his pet peeve. “We have a
beautiful city here. And I, like many of our citizens, would like to keep
it that way.”
Kost moved to the city eight years ago, after he wound up his public
relations business in St. Paul, Minn.
“The first month of retirement was nice,” he said. “But then I got
antsier and antsier.”
So, he got a part-time marketing job at the Grand Deck Golf Academy in
the Pelican Hill Golf Club. Two years ago, he took part in the police
Citizens Academy and became a volunteer.
The first thing that caught his eye as he patrolled the city? Ugly
signs, he says.
“Oh, I don’t mind the ones with the missing puppies and kittens,” he
said. “Those people probably don’t know it’s illegal to put up the signs.
What really bug me are the huge commercial signs that say ‘Earn $5,000
sitting at home’ or ‘Lose 40 pounds in two days.”’
So every Monday from 7:30 in the morning to 4 in the afternoon, he
rips off signs from lampposts, walls and anywhere else people might put
them.
And they keep him pretty busy.
On Monday morning alone, Kost took down 25 signs in less than two
hours.
“Last Monday was quite the record,” he added. “I pulled out 139
signs.”
He said he does not know if there is a particular time when the
numbers go up.
“Usually it’s higher during the beginning and end of the month,” Kost
said.
And you sure can tell what part of the city you’re in by the number of
signs you see around you, he says.
“Corona del Mar has the biggest concentration,” he said. “That’s where
I usually start. Then I go over to Balboa Island, the peninsula and then
The Wedge.”
In addition to removing signs, Kost patrols those areas and reports
suspicious circumstances back to his supervisor.
“He’s been doing such a terrific job,” Sgt. Steve Shulman said. “He is
really committed, and it’s amazing the number of signs he has pulled off
public property.”
Most cities pass ordinances against posting signs on public property,
but most residents are not aware of the laws, he added.
Kost said he would continue to do his job for as long as his health
permits.
“Nobody gave me this job, but I’m happy doing it,” he said. “If we
don’t keep up our beautiful city, these signs could turn it into East Los
Angeles.”
* Deepa Bharath covers public safety and courts. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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