North Dakota's 70-year-old parking meter prohibition may fall
GRAND FORKS, N.D. In the living room of JoNell Bakkes house sits a parking meter that represents a North Dakota mans fight to get the devices off the streets.
It still has coins in it, Bakke said in her Grand Forks home as she inserted a penny into the machine, giving her 12 minutes on the meter. It still works.
The city of Minot gave the meter to her grandfather, Howard Henry, who, after being ticketed for not feeding the machine in time, successfully got the meters banned in 1948 from North Dakota, the only state in the union to prohibit them.
But time may be running out on the meter for the nearly 70-year-old ban. In a 53-38 vote on Thursday, the House approved Senate Bill 2247, which would repeal the part of the Century Code that prohibits political subdivisions from installing parking meters and charging motorists to park along streets.
Read more: http://www.twincities.com/2017/03/12/north-dakotas-70-year-old-parking-meter-prohibition-may-fall/