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Committee narrowly advances bill to expand billboard spacing from 150 to 1,000 feet after heated debate

March 30, 2026 | 2026 Legislature LA, Louisiana


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Committee narrowly advances bill to expand billboard spacing from 150 to 1,000 feet after heated debate
The House Transportation Committee voted 9-7 to report House Bill 882 with amendments after a lengthy hearing that featured competing testimony from billboard industry representatives, small operators and municipal delegates.

Representative Muscarello framed the bill as a perceptual and safety measure, telling the committee he had spent a year negotiating with billboard owners to reach a compromise on spacing, and that the change would not apply to interstate billboards (which already use 1,000-foot spacing). "We're seventh in the nation in the amount of billboards we have," Muscarello said, urging the committee to support statewide consistency.

Opponents warned of disproportionate effects on small, local billboard owners and on small businesses that rely on local advertising. Wayne Martin, who testified in opposition, argued the change would centralize market power with larger billboard companies and remove a tool small owners use to advertise locally. "This is going to be the death knell of the small billboard companies in the small rural areas," Martin said.

Representative Muscarello offered amendments to grandfather pre-2010 permits and to allow rebuilding in limited act-of-God situations; the committee adopted an amendment package and then voted to report the bill to the floor. The roll-call and motion were recorded during committee proceedings and produced a 9-7 margin to move the measure forward.

Members pressed for additional local consultation and several representatives underscored concerns about urban corridors where local land-use rules and municipal ordinances already address outdoor advertising. The sponsor said he would continue outreach and that he welcomed suggested edits from opponents.

Outcome: the committee reported HB 882 with amendments and voted 9-7 to move it to the House floor for further consideration.

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