(1) To be
eligible for placement of a business sign on a motorist information sign panel
a motorist service activity must conform to the following standards:
(a) Gas activity:
(i) Provide vehicle services including fuel,
oil, tire repair and water; and
(ii) Be in continuous operation at least
sixteen hours a day, seven days a week; and
(iii) Provide restroom facilities, drinking
water and a telephone access;
(iv)
Motorist information sign panels may be installed and existing signing will not
be removed when the motorist service activity is closed for a short period of
time or when its hours of operation have been reduced as a result of a shortage
of gasoline;
(v) Activities not
meeting the tire repair requirement of (i) of this subsection but have gas,
oil, and water may qualify for signing provided that the motorist information
sign panel displays fewer than the full complement of business signs. A
telephone must also be available at no cost for a person to use to acquire tire
repair;
(vi) Business signs for
card-lock gas activities may be installed, provided that the activities serve
the general motoring public, without membership, and accept a variety of credit
cards available to the general public. Card-lock gas activities must also meet
the applicable requirements of (a)(i) through (v) of this subsection.
(b) Food activity:
(i) Be licensed or approved by the county
health office; and
(ii) Food
activities in fee zones 1 and 2 shall be in continuous operation to serve meals
for a minimum of ten hours a day six days a week, and food activities in fee
zone 3 shall be in continuous operation to serve meals for a minimum of eight
hours a day six days a week; and
(iii) Have inside seating for a minimum of
twenty patrons and parking facilities for a minimum of ten vehicles;
and
(iv) If curb service is
provided, have a minimum of ten drive-in service stalls; and
(v) Provide telephone and restroom
facilities.
(c) Lodging
activity:
(i) Be licensed or approved by the
Washington department of health; and
(ii) Provide adequate sleeping and bathroom
accommodations available without reservations for rental on a daily basis;
and
(iii) Provide public telephone
facilities.
(d) Camping
activity (applicable only for activities available from interstate highways):
(i) Have a valid business license;
(ii) Consist of at least twenty camping
spaces and have adequate parking, modern sanitary and drinking water facilities
for such spaces; and
(iii) Have an
attendant on duty to manage and maintain the facility twenty-four hours a day
while in operation.
(e)
Recreation activity (applicable only for activities available from
noninterstate highways):
(i) Consist of
activities and sports of interest to family groups and the public generally in
which people participate for purposes of active physical exercise, collective
amusement or enjoyment of nature; e.g., hiking, golfing, skiing, boating,
swimming, picnicking, camping, fishing, tennis, horseback riding, ice skating
and gun clubs; and
(ii) Be licensed
or approved by the state or local agency regulating the particular type of
business; and
(iii) When the
recreational activity is a campground, it must meet the criteria specified in
WAC
468-70-050(1)(d)(i)
thru (iii).
(iv) Activities must be
open to the motoring public without appointment, at least six hours a day, five
days a week including Saturday and/or Sunday.
(f) Tourist-oriented business activity:
(i) A natural, recreational, historical,
cultural, educational, or entertainment activity, or a unique or unusual
commercial or nonprofit activity, the major portion of whose income or visitors
are derived during its normal business seasons from motorists not residing in
the immediate area of the activity.
(ii) Be listed as a historic district on the
National Register of Historic Places, on the Washington Heritage Register, or
as a National Historic Landmark with the state's office of archaeology and
historic preservation. Signs on private property that mark the entrance to the
historic district and a letter of support by the jurisdictional local agency
are required.
(iii) Be a commercial
district as adopted by a city ordinance or resolution with a minimum of one
million square feet of leasable commercial space located within one square
mile. The commercial district must provide a unique commercial activity where
the majority of the district's customers do not reside in the city where the
commercial district is located. The commercial district shall be located within
one mile of the nearest state highway. Only the name of the commercial district
will be displayed on the business sign. Corporate logos may not be
displayed.
(iv) Activities must be
open to the motoring public without appointment, at least six hours a day, five
days a week including Saturday and/or Sunday.
(g) Twenty-four-hour pharmacy:
(i) Be open twenty-four hours a day, seven
days a week.
(ii) Have a
state-licensed pharmacist present and on duty at all times.
(2) To be eligible for
a RV symbol on its business sign, the business or destination shall have
amenities, designed to accommodate recreational and other large vehicles,
including:
(a) A hard-surfaced access to and
from the business, that is free of potholes and is at least twelve feet wide
with minimum turning radii of fifty feet.
(b) The roadway access and parking facilities
must be free of utility wires, tree branches, or other obstructions up to
fourteen feet above the surfacing.
(c) Facilities having short-term parking,
such as restaurants and tourist attractions, must have a minimum of two parking
spaces that are at least twelve feet wide and sixty-five feet long with a
minimum turning radius of fifty feet for entering and exiting.
(d) Fueling islands must be located to allow
for pull-through with a minimum entering and exiting turning radius of fifty
feet.
(e) Canopied fueling islands
must have a fourteen-foot minimum overhead clearance.
(f) Fueling facilities selling diesel are
required to have pumps with noncommercial nozzles.
(g) For campgrounds, a minimum of two parking
spaces at least eighteen feet wide and forty-five feet long are
required.
(h) Business activities
must also post directional signing on the premises as needed to indicate
RV-friendly parking spaces and other on-site RV-friendly services, so that the
motorist is given additional guidance upon leaving the public highway and
entering the property.
(3) Distances prescribed herein will be
measured from the center of the interchange or intersection along the
centerline of the most direct public road to the facility access.
(4) The maximum distance that gas, food,
lodging, camping, recreational, or tourist-oriented activities can be located
on either side of an interchange or intersection to qualify for a business sign
shall be as follows:
(a) From an interstate
highway, gas, food, and lodging activities shall be located within three miles
in either direction. Camping or tourist-oriented activities shall be located
within five miles in either direction;
(b) From a noninterstate highway, gas, food,
lodging, recreation, or tourist-oriented activities shall be located within
five miles in either direction.
(c)
A twenty-four-hour pharmacy must be located within three miles of an interstate
or noninterstate highway.
(d) Where
there are fewer than the maximum number, as specified in WAC
468-70-060(3)(a),
of eligible services within the distance limits prescribed in (a) and (b) of
this subsection, the distance limits may be increased up to a maximum of
fifteen miles to complete the balance of allowable signs.
(i) In reference to WAC
468-70-040(3),
the department may erect and maintain signs on an alternate route that is
longer than fifteen miles if it is safer and still provides reasonable and
convenient travel to an eligible activity.
(ii) The department may erect and maintain
signs on a route up to a maximum of twenty miles if an activity qualifies as
eligible and is located within a distressed area under the criteria set forth
in chapter 43.168
RCW.
(5)
Within cities and towns having a population greater than twenty-five thousand,
the department shall obtain concurrence from the municipality of locations for
installing panels, and may request that the municipality install the
panels.
(6) A gas, food, lodging,
camping/recreational, tourist-oriented, or twenty-four-hour pharmacy activity
visible from the mainline at least three hundred feet prior to an intersection
shall not qualify for a business sign on such highway. The activity's
on-premise sign is considered part of that activity in determining the three
hundred foot visibility.
(7) When a
multiple business activity qualifies for business sign placement on more than
one type of motorist information sign panel, placement will be made on that
type of panel which, as determined by the department, best describes the main
product or service. Additional business signs for a qualifying multiple
business activity may only be placed on more than one type of motorist
information sign panel where the applicable panels display fewer than a full
complement of business signs. Where these additional business signs complete
the full complement of business signs on a motorist information sign panel, the
most recently installed of such additional business signs shall be substituted
for in the event that a qualifying single business activity applies to receive
business signs.
(8) Motorist
information sign panels will not be erected and maintained by the department
until adequate follow-through signing, as specified by the department, is
erected on local roads and/or streets. Written assurance that the
follow-through signs will be maintained is required.
(9) Where operations are seasonal, business
signs for each specific location shall be removed or covered during the
appropriate period as determined by the department.