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Farmers Field Roadside Billboard Risks

Expect a big jump in distracted, dangerous drivers, expert says

A Porsche changed Jerry Wachtel's life

It was sitting on a racetrack, when, as a college student, Wachtel stuck his head inside. What impressed him was not the car's stripped-down feel but the tachometer, turned on its side so that the red line faced toward the sky "at the 12 o'clock mark," he says.

"When the driver is racing a car, he doesn't have a lot of time to look at where the needle is. If it's right in front of him, he sees it a lot faster," he explains. The less time spent looking away from the track, the quicker the driver reaction.

That brief experience led Wachtel to become an engineering psychologist — specifically, he has spent his life studying human behavior, then telling governing authorities how to increase driving safety and save people's lives.

Wachtel's credits are on the national and international scale. He was director of a Federal Department of Transportation lab that studied driver behavior. In 1980, he performed the first study on how drivers are affected by looking at digital signage.

Now a consultant, he is a sought-after speaker at the American Association of State Highway & Transportation Officials (AASHTO), often presenting research to leaders of transportation departments.

Wachtel knows about as much as a man can know about the effects of roadway billboards on driver safety, whether those billboards are traditionally illuminated, static digital displays or digital signs that flip every several seconds.

For a long time now, researchers have known that a driver who takes his eyes off the road for two seconds or longer increases his risk of crashing by more than a factor of two. Yet a study paid for by the billboard industry shows that "static" billboards cause five percent of drivers to take their eyes off the road for two seconds or more.

And when it comes to driving past the much brighter new technology of digital billboards? A staggering 17 percent of drivers stop watching the road for two seconds or more.

Wachtel believes there are safe locations where, in general, billboards can be erected without statistically increasing the chances of car crashes.

But, he says, the evidence is clear that placing any "visual distraction" such as a billboard along roadway curves, hills — or, "especially," along interchanges — is dangerous, increasing the chance of roadway death or injury.

Yet this is exactly the type of location where Los Angeles politicians led by Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, his first cousin California Speaker of the Assembly John A. Pérez and City Councilwoman Jan Perry — backed unanimously by the L.A. City Council — would place 20 billboards.

The billboards would benefit megacorporation AEG, which would use the millions of dollars in advertising revenue to defray the costs of building a promised "Pico Hall" convention space next to its proposed $1.6 billion Farmers Field NFL stadium. An unknown fraction of the billboard ad revenue would go into city coffers.

AEG would place those ads along the curving, elevation-changing, massive interchange of the heavily trafficked 10 and 110 freeways, where more than 550,000 drivers pass by each day traveling in four directions — thus breaking every rule Wachtel cherishes.

The danger of mixing advertising and interchanges, he explains, is that "Some cars are speeding up, some cars are getting off, [some drivers are] looking for exit signs — these are places where we have a lot of traffic conflict. When you have traffic conflict, you have an increased risk of a crash."

Wachtel adds, "Strictly from the basis of traffic safety, you don't want to have billboards staring drivers in the face, where traffic conflicts are high."

That's why, he says, "There are many countries [that] prohibit advertising signs within a certain distance of a freeway interchange."

Wachtel is highly regarded as an expert. States, cities, counties all call Wachtel.

But in September 2008, when Perry led an 11-to-1 City Council vote to award "signage rights" to AEG that would have let it mount billboards on the L.A. Convention Center walls facing the freeway, no city official sought Wachtel's advice. The controversial plan never received a final go-ahead.

Nor did his phone ring in the many months leading up to Aug. 9, when the City Council and Villaraigosa's "blue ribbon" panel approved an NFL stadium agreement that enshrines the use of billboards at that same interchange, and on those same Convention Center walls, as a cornerstone of funding for Pico Hall, a convention building AEG has promised to build as part of its Farmers Field deal (after it demolishes West Hall).

Before signing the Convention Center/Farmers Field advertising deal with AEG, rather than commission a safety study about car crashes and possible loss of life related to erecting numerous billboards on the freeway, city leaders commissioned a different kind of study entirely: They asked how much money they could make from the advertising.

A "sponsorship evaluation" prepared for the city by Convention Sports & Leisure (CSL) was largely based on the aborted 2008 deal in which Perry wanted to give AEG control of dozens of proposed displays, signs and billboards on the advertising-free outer walls of the Convention Center. CSL says the Farmers Field billboard deal would bring in $5.4 million in annual ad revenue.

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