Business & Tech

Sign Showdown Scheduled For Sunset (Poll)

Main Street business owner Charles Wasser is being summoned to court by Chester Borough for a sign ordinance violation.

The next chapter in the saga over the sign ordinance in since the, owner of , takes place at 7:30 p.m. May 23 at the . 

The Road So Far

Wasser’s struggle with the borough and what he believed was an back in March.

Find out what's happening in Mendham-Chesterfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

According to Wasser, this was the culmination of years of frustration with the borough for 'inconsistent' code enforcement that was 'hurting local business owners'.

A sign that was being used to promote his business was banned, but Wasser maintained that as an American, his right to free speech allowed him to make political statements on his sign board, no matter what the ordinance said.

Find out what's happening in Mendham-Chesterfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

"It is no longer promotional," Wasser said. "It is my protected right of free speech."

The Chester Borough governing body disagreed.

After several false starts, Mayor Robert Davis sent a response letter to the Observer Tribune and to the Daily Record (but not to Patch, as was promised when we first broke the story).

Davis sent the letter after it was decided by the council not to have the debate in the media.

At the same time, Davis went on record in the article in the Tribune, describing concern that Chester could become a “red light district” and that business owners should “know the rules” and “have business plan”.

The mayor speaking on the record prompted criticism from the council, as some members said Davis alluding to a Main Street filled with sex-oriented businesses was inappropriate and his other remarks harsh.  

Davis said that he had a first amendment right to say what he wanted, and  that “the public’s response to my statements has been positive.”

Public response on the topic and the mayor's thoughts can be found in the poll and several comments on the Mendham-Chester Patch site and a response letter to the editor published in the Observer-Tribune.

Now

Wasser and the Borough will go before a judge tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the new Town Hall facility at 50 North Road. Patch will be there, so stay tuned for the next installment of the sign struggle.

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