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430.011 PEDESTRIAN MALL ORDINANCE, IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT.
    Subdivision 1. Legislative findings. The legislature finds that: (1) increases in population
and automobile usage have created traffic congestion in central business districts of cities of the
first class; (2) those conditions endanger pedestrians and impede the movement of police and
fire equipment, ambulances, and other emergency vehicles; (3) streets in those central business
districts improved to their maximum width for sidewalk and roadway purposes cannot be further
widened without taking valuable buildings and improvements, substantially impairing the primary
function of those city streets as pedestrian facilities, and impairing the cities' sources of tax
revenue; and (4) limitation on the use of those streets by private vehicles may be found by the
council of any city of the first class to be in the interest of the city and state, to be of benefit to
adjoining properties, and to be essential to the effective use of the streets for street purposes.
    Subd. 2. Statement of policy. It is the state's policy to permit the city council of any city
of the first class to protect the public welfare and the interests of the public in the safe and
effective movement of persons and to preserve and enhance the function and appearance of
the central business districts of cities of the first class by adopting pedestrian mall ordinances
under this section.
    Subd. 3. Pedestrian mall ordinances authorized. A pedestrian mall ordinance may be
adopted if the city council finds that:
(1) a street or a part of a street (i) is not a part of any state highway, (ii) is located primarily
in a central business district, (iii) is improved to its maximum width for roadway and sidewalk
purposes, and (iv) is congested during all or a substantial part of normal business hours;
(2) reasonably convenient alternate routes exist for private vehicles to other parts of the
city and state;
(3) continued unlimited use of the street or part of the street by private vehicles may
endanger pedestrians;
(4) abutting properties can reasonably and adequately receive and deliver merchandise and
materials from other streets and alleys or through arrangements for limited use of the streets
by carriers of merchandise and materials; and
(5) it would be in the best interests of the city and the public and of benefit to adjacent
properties to use the street primarily for pedestrian purposes and pedestrian use is the highest and
best use of the street or part of it.
    Subd. 4. Ordinance provisions. An ordinance under subdivision 3 must (1) set forth the
findings required in subdivision 3, (2) designate a street or part of a street as a pedestrian mall, (3)
limit the use of the surface of the street or part of the street at times or during hours or days set
by the council to pedestrians and to classes of emergency, public works, maintenance, service,
and utility transportation vehicles defined in the ordinance, and (4) include other provisions
required in this chapter.
    Subd. 5. Intersecting streets. An ordinance under subdivision 3 must state that a limitation
of use does not apply to vehicles on an intersecting street crossing the street or part of a street
designated as a pedestrian mall unless the intersecting street is similarly designated.
    Subd. 6. Use of pedestrian mall by public carriers. If the council finds that a street or part
of a street limited under this section is served by a transit utility engaged in mass transportation
of persons within the city by bus or street railway, and that continued use of the street or part of
the street by the transit utility will benefit the city and the public and to adjacent property, the
council shall permit the transit utility to use the street or part of the street for transit purposes to
the extent and subject to the obligations and restrictions applicable to the transit utility in the use
of other streets of the city. Upon similar findings, the council may permit use of the street or part
of the street by utilities engaged in carrying persons by taxicabs.
    Subd. 7. Special access permits. If any property abutting on a street or part of a street
limited under this section does not, when an ordinance is adopted, have access to some other
street or alley for delivery of or receiving merchandise and materials, the council shall provide for
deliveries in the ordinance. It may do so by issuing a permit to the owners or occupants of the
property for the use of the street or part of the street for deliveries, or otherwise. The council shall
provide for deliveries during hours and days, which need not be ordinary business hours or days,
the council finds to be reasonably adequate for the purpose and not to interfere with the use of the
street or part of the street by pedestrians and other authorized vehicles.
    Subd. 8. Adoption with improvement proceedings. If an ordinance is to be adopted
in connection with an improvement of the street under this chapter, it must so state, must be
introduced as a proposed ordinance and given its first reading concurrently with the introduction
and adoption of the resolution of the council beginning the improvement proceedings, and must
not be given its final reading or be finally adopted until the council has taken action on the
proposed improvement under section 430.02, subdivision 12.
    Subd. 9. Adoption in other cases. An ordinance that is not being adopted in connection with
an improvement of the street under this chapter must state that fact and be considered and adopted
like other ordinances, subject to the right of appeal under section 430.031. The council shall not
meet to give the ordinance its final reading or to finally adopt the ordinance unless a copy of the
proposed ordinance and a notice stating the time and place at which the council will meet to
consider its adoption has been published in the official newspaper of the city at least once and
has been mailed to the owners of the lots or parcels of land abutting on the proposed pedestrian
mall at least three weeks before the meeting.
    Subd. 10. Description of assessable properties. An ordinance adopted in connection with
an improvement of the street under this chapter must describe the property to be assessed for the
improvement. No property is subject to assessment for the improvement unless it is described in
the ordinance.
    Subd. 11. Annual costs; districts. If an ordinance is to be adopted in connection with an
improvement of the street under this chapter and the ordinance includes a council determination
that (1) the improvement will involve annual costs in addition to the initial cost of constructing
and making the improvement, and (2) the annual costs will provide benefits primarily to adjacent
property rather than to the city as a whole, the ordinance may require that the improvement and its
facilities be operated and maintained under section 430.101 and the costs assessed or taxed to
benefited properties under section 430.102.
Alternatively, after a pedestrian mall ordinance has been adopted or lands have been
acquired or improved for a pedestrian mall, the council may require by separate ordinance or by
amendment to a pedestrian mall ordinance that the improvement and its facilities be operated and
maintained and the costs taxed and assessed to benefited properties under sections 430.101 and
430.102, subject to appeal under section 430.031. In that case, the ordinance must describe the
properties to be assessed or taxed for annual costs. The area may be given the name "(name of
street) Pedestrian Mall Improvement District."
    Subd. 12. Protests. The owners of lands abutting on a street or part of a street proposed as
a pedestrian mall representing a majority of the frontage on the proposed pedestrian mall may
make written objection to the establishment of the proposed pedestrian mall at any time before
the ordinance has been given its final reading and adopted. If they do the council shall end the
proceedings for establishment of the mall. In that event, no ordinance establishing the same or
substantially the same pedestrian mall may be introduced or adopted within one year after the
termination.
    Subd. 13. Interpretation; repeal and amendments. Notwithstanding the improvement
of a street as a pedestrian mall or the adoption of a pedestrian mall ordinance, the city and its
council keep their police powers and other rights and powers relating to the city street or street
part constituting the pedestrian mall, and the pedestrian mall action may not be construed to be a
vacation, in whole or in part, of any city street or street part in the mall area. The establishment
of a pedestrian mall under this chapter is a matter of regulation only. This chapter does not
prevent the city and its council, at any time after the adoption of a pedestrian mall ordinance,
from abandoning the operation of the pedestrian mall, from changing the extent of the pedestrian
mall, from supplying or amending the description of the district to be specially assessed or
taxed for annual costs of the pedestrian mall, or from changing or repealing any limitations on
the use of the pedestrian mall by private vehicles or any plan, rules, or regulations adopted for
the operation of a pedestrian mall.
    Subd. 14. When effective. An ordinance or amendment adopted under this section does not
become effective until 20 days after its final adoption and publication.
History: 1963 c 504 s 2; 1987 c 229 art 9 s 1

Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes