Everyone has some great ideas on this. I agree with just about all of them, especially NHscrapman's estimate for the price of the job.
That sign could be a huge liability if you don't do it right, but is very easy to do with the right equipment and precautions. As a demolition contractor I've literally done dozens of these in this type location and worse. It is absolutely not worth taking down for the scrap value. I don't think it will quite weigh 1000 lbs so you're looking at a hundred bucks if you cut it up.
I would have to bring in my excavator ($500 mobilization including loading, moving, unloading, moving the truck to safe parking, do the job, then reloading and unloading back at home). Then at a good time (not rush hour), close the street working with the police. Secure the sign to the excavator bucket with a strap or chain, not just push it down because the thing can go anywhere no matter which way you're pushing.
Take care not to damage the street or sidewalks. I might have to lay down a trail of tires to walk on and even wood blocks to get over the curb. Those excavators are heavy and can crush a curb into the ground.
Then remove the nuts from the bolts with wrenches if they want to keep the bolts or my favorite, Jon's way (love the dragon). Make sure the power is off.
Watching out for the power lines (a major caution), lay it down on a trailer instead of a building, car, etc. Then you still have to take it to the scrap yard or store it somewhere for resale.
Costs Excavator $500 (probably close to the same if you hire a crane by the time they charge for moving, setting up and the time it takes securing the area while they are there)
Labor $150 (two man crew at least, may need a truck driver too)
Overhead $100 (varies from company to company but this is around the daily cost to keep the doors open on my Dad's business)
Insurance $150 (just a guess actually, but it is expensive to keep liability and truck insurance is over $7000 a year)
Permits $50 (the permit may cost or be free, but it's still a separate job for a different day)
Misc $50 (upkeep on equipment, torch gas, supplies)
Total $1000
Profit $500 (we would love to get 30% profit on every job, but many are down to 10-15%)
Total of bid $1500
That is how I would have to bid it if it was an official bid. If this was out in the open, I could tie my winch to it and take it down with my Dodge in 15 minutes, cheap, but the city environment makes that very hard to do safely.
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