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  • 2019-05-21 (xsd:date)
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  • Did Statesville, NC, Try to Stop Camping World from Flying the U.S. Flag? (en)
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  • In May 2019, several reports and posts on social media claimed that the city of Statesville, NC, had taken legal action against a camping and outdoors retailer aimed at preventing them from flying the U.S. flag outside their local store. On 18 May, Camping World posted the following message on Facebook: The post linked to a Change.org petition inviting readers to sign up and express their support for the company's stance on the flag. As of 21 May, that petition had attracted more than 100,000 signatures. The petition was boosted on Twitter by Marcus Lemonis, the controversial CEO of Camping World, who wrote: I will not budge ... I will not compromise ... I will not take the flag down: In May 2019, the city of Statesville did indeed apply for a court injunction that, if ordered, would force Camping World and associated companies to remove or replace an American flag from their location at Moreland Drive in Statesville and would impose fines of $50 per day -- stretching back to October 2018 -- until Camping World rectified the situation. However, the descriptions of the controversy published by Camping World on Facebook and Change.org were woefully incomplete and therefore likely to be extremely misleading, because they failed to mention the following highly relevant details from what is now a four-year battle between city officials and the Illinois-based company: Beginning in 2014, Section 6.07 of the city of Statesville's Unified Development Code (UDC) had stated that governmental flags (such as the Stars and Stripes) flown outside local businesses could be no larger then 8 feet high and 12 feet wide (96 square feet) and flown on a flagpole no taller than 40 feet. In June 2015, Camping World applied for a variance (akin to an exemption) to Section 6.07, to allow the company to fly an American flag measuring 40 feet high and 80 feet wide (3,200 square feet) on a 130-foot flagpole. In August 2015, the Statesville Board of Adjustment denied the application for a variance. Three years later, in June 2018, Statesville City Council voted to change Section 6.07 of the UDC to allow American flags 25 feet high and 40 feet wide (1,000 square feet) with a flagpole no taller than 130 feet. Shortly thereafter, Camping World applied for, and was granted, a permit to erect just such an American flag at the Moreland Drive location of Gander Outdoors. However, in August 2018 the company instead erected a 40-by-80-foot flag at the location. According the city's civil complaint against Camping World, municipal officials twice warned the company that the flag was in violation of the already-expanded restrictions contained in Section 6.07. At the 1 October 2018 Statesville City Council meeting, members voted 5-3 against a proposal to once again expand the restrictions to allow a 40-by-80-foot American flag such as the one flying at Gander Outdoors. Two weeks later, according to the civil complaint, the city issued a citation to Camping World, advising that the company had violated Section 6.07 and had been warned of such, and that the city was entitled to take further legal action against the company and to collect a fine of $50 per day, starting from 15 October 2018 until such time as Camping World became compliant with Section 6.07 — a fine that is itself set out in Section 1.07 of the city's UDC. Between October 2018 and May 2019, Camping World failed to remove the flag or replace it with one that complied with Section 6.07, and on 7 May, the city filed a civil complaint in Iredell County District Court, seeking an injunction that would force the company to comply with the city ordinance on pain of a further charge of contempt of court, as well as seeking collection of the $50/day fine in addition to legal costs. None of that four-year backstory was included in Camping World's widely shared Facebook post or Change.org petition, which stated only that the city of Statesville was bringing a lawsuit to force the company to take down its American flag. The company made no mention of the fact that the city had already changed the relevant ordinance to allow flags 10 times larger than before, nor that the city had granted Camping World a permit for a flag that would have measured 25 by 40 feet (1,000 square feet), nor that the court injunction, if ordered, would allow the company to replace the existing flag with a smaller one. As such, Camping World's Facebook post and Change.org petition were woefully and misleadingly lacking in highly-relevant context. Speaking by phone, Camping World CEO Marcus Lemonis told Snopes.com, I do accept the fact that our current flag size is in violation of the city's ordinance, which he claimed was unusual in comparison to most cities in America, including most cities in North Carolina. However, he vowed that: We will not be taking the flag down under any circumstances. Zero. None. Never going to happen. He later added: You can make the fine $500 a day, $1,000 a day, $5,000 a day -- I'll just pay it. It's that important to me. Lemonis emphasized that he and his company respected and would comply with any restrictions on flags and flagpole heights that were aimed at preventing danger to motorists, passersby, or to air traffic, but that no such public safety rationale had been given in the case of Statesville. He also stipulated that he believed the restrictions in place should be loosened specifically for the American flag, and that he thought similar size restrictions were reasonable for other kinds of flag: We will not budge on the size of the American flag, singularly, when we know that there is no danger presented to people or to air traffic. (en)
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