Political signs are protected on private property and, during elections, in the state road right-of-way. N.C.G.S. §136-32 lets anyone place political signs in the NCDOT right-of-way from 30 days before early voting through 10 days after the election. Orange County and Chapel Hill regulate size and placement content-neutrally.
After Reed v. Town of Gilbert, Orange County and its towns must regulate signs content-neutrally, and Chapel Hill runs one of the region's stricter sign codes limiting size, number, and duration on private lots. The distinctive North Carolina rule is §136-32: during the window from 30 days before one-stop early voting through 10 days after election day, people may place political signs in the right-of-way of the State highway system, subject to size and setback limits and the permission of adjacent property owners. Outside that window, or in the roadway sight triangle, the signs can be removed. HOA covenants may add their own limits.
Signs left in the NCDOT right-of-way outside the §136-32 election window, or blocking sight lines, are removed by NCDOT or county crews. Oversized private-property signs draw a zoning notice to correct.
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