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IStarTribune.com MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL. MINNESOTAI <br />LJ 11�Uualu u1J1.luLG. 1v111111cLUtu W 111 ICl)wiu 1 <br />Last update: January 31, 2007 — 4:42 PM <br />Billboard dispute: Minnetonka wins Round 1 <br />A judge ruled thatMinnetonka was within its rights to deny electricity to two <br />new digital billboards along the interstate. <br />By David Peterson, Star Tribune <br />In a ruling that could set a statewide pattern for a fast - emerging technology, a <br />judge in Minneapolis ruled Tuesday that Minnetonka had every right to order the <br />power cut off to a new species of brilliantly visible digital billboards. <br />Hennepin County District Judge Lloyd Zimmerman said the city was within its <br />rights, given ample evidence that the billboards' owner tried to sneak the new <br />technology into place. <br />Officials in Minnetonka hailed the decision as a major victory. <br />"People are agitated about this," City Attorney Desyl Peterson said. "Our mayor <br />is getting a lot of e-mails and phone messages saying, 'Please fight this, it's <br />terrible.' " <br />Clear Channel Outdoor has put up eight electronic billboards in the metro area, <br />and Minnetonka isn't the only city fighting back. <br />Others, including St. Paul, have passed moratoriums or have issued cease -and- <br />desist orders as the technology spreads. <br />And the other cities are "very interested" in the outcome of the Minnetonka case, <br />said attorney John Baker of the Minneapolis firm of Greene Espel, who was <br />named by the League of Minnesota Cities to represent Minnetonka. <br />Cities worry not only about the danger as fast - moving motorists' eyes are drawn <br />off the road, butalso about aesthetics, with the potential to turn every major <br />thoroughfare into a mini -Las Vegas Strip. Minnetonka has cited national studies <br />suggesting that accident rates jump when electronic billboards are installed <br />along busy metro freeways. <br />Clear Channel Outdoor raced to court in December after Minnetonka refused to <br />allow any power to flow to two billboards on Interstate Hwys. 394 and 494. The <br />company aims to change messages every eight seconds, making the costly new <br />billboards far more flexible, noticeable -- and profitable. It says it has invested <br />millions in upgrades. <br />1'age 1 of 2 <br />In his ruling, Zimmerman wrote, "There is substantial evidence to support <br />Minnetonka's claim that Clear Channel avoided disclosing its plans to deploy <br />LED billboards in the city of Minnetonka, and operated 'under the radar' to get <br />the billboards up and running, in order to meet its expansion and profit goals for <br />http://,www.startribune.com/462/v-print/story/97037_3.2.111 2/21/2007 <br />