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Under the partnership, Norton equipped about 10 percent of its 900 billboards in Greater Cincinnati with GPS to be able to communicate with mobile devices equipped with location-tracking software.
A Hamilton County judge halted Cincinnati's plan to tax billboard advertising in hopes of bringing in $700,000 a year. Norton Outdoor Advertising has since sued the city. City Council approved an ...
Cincinnati City Council ... But the owners of one of the city's biggest billboard companies, Norton Outdoor Advertising, cried foul, saying it unfairly targeted a few companies, on top of already ...
Date Announced: 28 Jan 2010 DANVILLE, Ill. and CINCINNATI, Ohio – (January 28, 2010) – Norton Outdoor Advertising, a Cincinnati-based company that has been in the billboard business for more than 60 ...
CINCINNATI - A judge will continue to ... Attorneys for two of the city’s biggest billboard companies, Norton Outdoor Advertising and Lamar Advertising, sued the city in July alleging the ...
A tax levied by the city of Cincinnati on billboard companies ... Lamar Advertising and Norton Outdoor Advertising, indicated the tax would require them to remove less profitable billboards ...
Those businesses, Lamar Advertising and Norton Outdoor Advertising, indicated the tax ... and strict scrutiny applies,” Kennedy said. Cincinnati imposed the tax three years ago to raise $709,000 ...