Minnesota State Fair getting pay-by-mobile parking in 2025
The Brief
The City of Falcon Heights is bringing pay-by-mobile parking to streets near the Minnesota State Fairgrounds in 2025.
Parking zones will cost $25 per day, and there will be about 1,000 spots available.
The measure passed 5-0 at a Falcon Heights City Council meeting Wednesday night.
FALCON HEIGHTS, Minn. (FOX 9) - The City of Falcon Heights on Wednesday voted unanimously to approve pay-by-mobile parking for the Minnesota State Fair starting this year.
The city council met Wednesday night and voted 5-0 to implement the program in time for the State Fair, one of the largest in the country.
What we know
If you plan on driving to the Great Minnesota Get-Together, there should be more parking options on streets near the State Fairgrounds. The measure creates paid parking zones in neighborhoods east of Snelling Avenue that provide about 1,000 spots near the State Fair.
Why you should care
City officials say the program will charge a flat fee of $25 per day for vehicles to park between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. during the 12 days of the Minnesota State Fair. Fees can be paid online through a web site, app or automated pay-by-phone line. Enforcement will be tied through a vehicle's license plate.
The program will also include hiring trained ambassadors to be in parking zones to direct traffic, answer questions and enhance public safety.
The city approved five actions related to the program, including a one-year agreement with ParkMobile to be the vendor. Under the agreement, the City of Falcon Heights will receive about 80% of the fees.
Dig deeper
City officials say residents who live on streets in the designated parking zone will receive one free parking pass in the mail starting in July. They'll have the option to request additional passes, and there will be up to 600 properties eligible for the passes.
What they're saying
Falcon Heights Mayor Randy Gustafson reacted to the vote Wednesday night.
"Pay-by-mobile parking provides an excellent solution to promote safety for our Falcon Heights residents and the hundreds of thousands of visitors we welcome to our city during the Minnesota State Fair," Gustafson said in a statement. "We heard from our residents during this process on how we could improve the plan, and we believe the version adopted by the City Council will meet the needs of our community."
Timeline
Temporary parking zone signs will be installed before the start of the Minnesota State Fair, and removed after Labor Day.
The Source
The measure was passed at the Falcon Heights City Council meeting Wednesday night.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Virginia Beach police to launch drones as first responders at the Oceanfront
VIRGINIA BEACH — Before the first police officer sets foot on the ground of a possible crime scene, officials may already have gathered critical information with the help of a self-flying drone. Drones as first responders is a growing program in police departments across the country, and Virginia Beach will soon be the first Hampton Roads city to use the technology. The program will launch at the Oceanfront next year and will help augment the department — which is experiencing staffing shortages, said Brandon Kyle, police services manager who oversees the department's technological initiatives. Virginia Beach was short 76 officers as of May 29, according to records obtained by The Virginian-Pilot and Daily Press through a Freedom of Information Act request. On Tuesday, the City Council approved the transfer of $1.3 million from salary savings in the General Fund to purchase the drone equipment. The program will cost $418,000 a year throughout a nine-year contract. The first responder drones will supplement the department's plethora of surveillance capabilities in the resort area, which include dozens of pole-mounted cameras on the Boardwalk and Atlantic Avenue, a handful of newly installed automatic license plate readers and drones operated by pilots on the ground. Virginia Beach also solicits private security camera footage from residents and businesses through its Connect Virginia Beach program, Other Hampton Roads' police departments, including Newport News and James City County, are looking into expanding their drone programs to include first response options. Virginia Beach will purchase six unmanned aircraft systems from Skydio, a company that partners with Axon, the department's supplier of body worn cameras and other surveillance software. The drones will be docked on rooftops at the Oceanfront. The specific locations are still being worked out, Kyle said. The drones' coverage area will stretch from Rudee Inlet to 40th Street and west to Baltic Avenue. A pilot based at the department's Real Time Crime Center, inside police headquarters at the Municipal Center, will launch the drone. Deployment time is less than 40 seconds and flight speeds are up to 45 mph. The drone will fly itself along a customized flight path to an address or GPS coordinate, according to Skydio. It will capture live footage and provide an aerial view before officers arrive. Analysts in the crime center and officers in the field will be able to view the footage, Kyle said. The funding for the new technology came as Police Chief Paul Neudigate and City Manager Patrick Duhaney expressed concerns to City Council about unsanctioned events and pop-up crowds at the Oceanfront this year. The first responder drones could provide another perspective of issues arising in large crowds, Kyle said. 'We have that tool in our toolbelt if needed,' he said. 'If you're looking from above, you can see a full picture and coordinate resources.' Once a situation is stabilized, the drone will return to its rooftop docking station. The video footage from drone flights will be cataloged with other evidence and can be used to prosecute crimes, he said. 'We want to stay on the forefront of technology advancements,' said Kyle. 'This is just an additional resource on how we can provide better police service.' Stacy Parker, 757-222-5125,

Politico
2 days ago
- Politico
Majority of staff axed at Voice of America
The Trump administration on Friday sent out termination notices to hundreds of employees at Voice of America. Included in that group are employees working for the network's Persian-language service who were called back from administrative leave just last week in the wake of Israel's attack on Iran, according to two people familiar with the decision. The move — which makes official what has long been expected since hundreds of contract employees got termination notices in early May — is a part of the Trump administration's sweeping target to downsize the government and remake America's role in the global order. Critics of the administration's focus on VOA have said that the network has played a vital role in combatting disinformation abroad. But the administration says these cuts are in service of 'cutting waste' and putting 'American taxpayers first.' 'Today, we took decisive action to effectuate President Trump's agenda to shrink the out-of-control federal bureaucracy,' senior presidential adviser Kari Lake said in a statement released Friday . The move eliminates 1,400 jobs at U.S. Agency for Global Media, VOA's parent agency, roughly an 85 percent cut to the workforce. The last day on payroll for the employees will be Labor Day. Some of those affected by Friday's cuts who are not old enough for mandatory retirement, are being terminated without severance pay, according to one of the people. The move would contradict USAGM's policy on severance. 'As our legal team fight[s] for our rights under the law, we call on Congress to continue its long tradition of bipartisan support for VOA,' the named plaintiffs in VOA's lawsuit against the Trump administration said in a statement. 'Moscow, Beijing, Tehran and extremist groups are flooding the global information space with anti-American propaganda. Do not cede this ground by silencing America's voice.' Lake said in her statement that 250 employees will remain across the USAGM, VOA and the Office of Cuba Broadcasting. She noted that none of the OCB's 33 employees were terminated. The government-funded network, which was founded 80 years ago to combat Nazi disinformation during World War II, has — largely unsuccessfully — fought the administration's decision in court. The administration sent RIF notices to employees in small batches for weeks. But Friday's notice could deliver the coup de grâce for Voice of America after decades of providing the world with accurate information in countries where media is state-run.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Making NYC affordable: Where the mayoral primary candidates stand on the housing crisis
NEW YORK — New York City is facing intertwined housing and affordability crises, with record rents and historically low apartment vacancy rates. About half of households struggle to pay for the basics while a quarter live in poverty. Within the debate over affordability, finding ways to create more affordable housing has become a major concern for voters. With the Democratic primary for mayor approaching on Tuesday, the Daily News is breaking down some of the key issues for voters and where each candidate stands on them. Here is how the contenders have proposed tackling the housing crisis on social media, in interviews, during debates and as part of their formal policy plans. We have included the top seven candidates who met the fundraising thresholds to qualify for the second debate. Adams has touted her housing record as Speaker, saying she is 'doing the work' with large-scale rezonings like City of Yes, Innovation QNS and the Atlantic Avenue Mixed-Use Plan. As mayor she pledged to 'use every tool available' to address the housing crisis by cutting red tape and using emergency powers to get affordable housing built. She and the broader City Council also passed an expansion of the CityFHEPS rental assistance program as part of a protracted legal battle with Mayor Eric Adams. She has indicated she supports a rent freeze at least this year for tenants in rent-stabilized apartments. Cuomo has said he would use 'every option available' to develop 500,000 new apartments over a 10-year period. During the first debate, the former HUD secretary vowed to 'blow up' the city's Department of Housing Preservation and Development to minimize bureaucracy, a proposal that was warmly received by real estate players but balked at by tenant advocates. Cuomo has not supported a rent freeze for rent-stabilized tenants, dismissing it as a 'politically convenient posture.' Opponents of a freeze have argued that the cost of operating and maintaining buildings would continue to rise while rents remained flat, potentially putting property owners in a precarious financial position. Lander has said he would be 'the best-prepared housing mayor,' citing his years in urban planning and work passing the Gowanus rezoning while on the Council. His lengthy housing plan involves declaring a housing emergency to expedite the development of 500,000 new units of housing over a decade, including on city-owned golf courses. It also calls for coming down harder on 'irresponsible' landlords and increasing funding for NYCHA and the Department of Housing Preservation and Development. Lander has called for a one-year rent freeze in his capacity as comptroller and expressed an openness to doing so again as mayor. Mamdani has made freezing rents for rent-stabilized tenants a centerpiece of his campaign, saying he would do so for all four years if elected mayor. His housing plan would triple the City's production of affordable housing with the aim of producing 200,000 new homes over ten years. Mamdani would also fast-track 100% affordable projects, double the money being spent to preserve public housing and beef up municipal housing agencies. Mamdani proposes funding many of his ambitious plans by increasing taxes on the wealthiest New Yorkers. Myrie has pitched himself as the 'YIMBY' candidate, with a plan to build and preserve one million homes over a decade. It includes revitalizing NYCHA, building more in Midtown, reallocating shelter financing for housing and expanding the Right to Counsel program. Myrie has called for a one-year rent freeze for tenants in rent-stabilized apartments and said he would consider it in the future. Stringer's housing plan — dubbed 'Mitchell-Lama 2.0' — includes developing affordable homes by building on underutilized city-owned lots and reclaiming derelict properties from neglectful landlords. He further hopes to bolster public housing by securing $40 billion for NYCHA improvements. The former hedge fund manager summarized his housing mantra as 'unleash the private sector.' Tilson says he would cut red tape in order to create more affordable housing by streamlining zoning and approval processes, and said the city should be constructing at least 100,000 new units annually. Tilson indicated at the second debate that he does not support a rent freeze for rent-stabilized tenants this year.