Images via Google Street View (left) and Humboldt Waterkeeper.

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Outdoor advertising giant Outfront Media, Inc., has abandoned its efforts to resurrect a fallen billboard on the Hwy. 101 safety corridor between Arcata and Eureka. The company’s decision means the permanent elimination of a sign that was erected in Humboldt Bay’s tidelands more than 60 years ago.

As previously reported, the company had been seeking permits from various local and state agencies in hopes of rebuilding the billboard, which collapsed into the bay during windstorms this past January. The sign was located directly across from the Indianola cutoff.

Late last month, the Humboldt Bay Harbor District’s Board of Commissioners voted 3-0, with Commissioners Craig Benson and Patrick Higgins absent, to require an environmental study before determining whether the project is exempt from the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). 

The rebuild project would also have required a building permit from the county, which owns the property and was in a position to collect rent from the billboard, as well as a Coastal Development Permit from the California Coastal Commission — neither of which were foregone conclusions.

But unbeknownst to the Harbor District commissioners, by the time they’d made their decision, Outfront Media had already asked Caltrans’ Outdoor Advertising Branch to cancel its permit for the billboard. 

Harbor District Development Director Rob Holmlund told the Outpost earlier this week that the applicant — local Allpoints Signs owner Geoff Wills — called the district on Aug. 29 and “indicated that he would like to withdraw his application” to reconstruct the billboard.

Holmlund said in an email that the Harbor District had requested written confirmation of the request but had not received it. “However,” he added, “based on the phone call and the verbal request, we are considering the application withdrawn.”

The Outpost emailed personnel at Outfront Media to ask why the company asked for the permit to be canceled but has not heard back. We also emailed Humboldt County Public Works Director Tom Mattson to see if he knew why they’d done so.

“No I don’t,” he replied.

Regardless, the view of Humboldt Bay from Hwy. 101 will remain a bit clearer.