Powder, inversion beacons denied
Whitefish City Council voted 4-2 to
deny a sign variance request for two flashing beacons on the Great
Northern Brewery building that would signal powder or inversion
conditions at Whitefish Mountain Resort. Councilors Chris Hyatt and
Bill Kahle were in opposition of denial.
“I hope they bring this back at some
point,” Kahle said. “Bring it back and hopefully we will have a
strategy that is razor sharp.”
Phil Mitchell said he was sad the city
couldn’t legally grant the variance.
“For the life of me I don’t understand
why we can’t do this,” he said. “If it’s bureaucracy, that’s sad.
It doesn’t allow us to be creative.”
City staff determined the beacons
constitute a sign because they advertise conditions at the ski
resort. Flashing signs are not allowed under the city’s sign
ordinance without a variance.
Council was concerned that approval
could be viewed as arbitrary or capricious because the brewery was
unable to meet any of the criteria for a variance. Businesses
typically need to prove a hardship for a variance.
A loophole suggested by city attorney
Mary VanBuskirk was for the resort to put the beacons on a
city-owned building. The beacons would then be considered
information that benefits the public.
The resort was only interested in using
the brewery building.