Subdivision 1. Legislative findings and purpose. It is hereby found that the operation of motor vehicle, agricultural, construction machinery or other junk yards adjacent to the trunk highways on which motor vehicles are operated is a distracting influence on drivers, thereby impairing the public safety; and that junk yards are unsightly, thus impairing the public investment in such highways. It is hereby found and declared that in the interest of and to promote the public safety, to protect the public investment in such highways, and to preserve natural beauty, it is necessary to regulate the operation of junk yards on lands adjacent to the trunk highways of the state.
Subd. 2. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section, the terms defined in this subdivision have the meanings given them.
(b) "Automobile graveyard" means any establishment or place of business which is maintained, used, or operated for storing, keeping, buying, or selling wrecked, scrapped, ruined, or dismantled motor vehicles or motor vehicle parts.
(c) "Dealer" means any person, partnership, or corporation engaged in the operation of a junk yard.
(d) "Hazard signs" means signs listed in the Minnesota drivers' manual published by the Department of Public Safety, signs required by the State Fire Code, and other signs related to road or fire hazards and approved for use by the state or a political subdivision.
(e) "Industrial activities" means those activities permitted only in industrial zones, or in less restrictive zones by the nearest zoning authority within the state, or prohibited by said authority but generally recognized as industrial by other zoning authorities within the state, except that none of the following shall be considered industrial activities:
(1) outdoor advertising devices as defined in section 173.02, subdivision 16;
(2) agricultural, forestry, ranching, grazing, farming and related activities, including, but not limited to, wayside fresh produce stands;
(3) activities normally and regularly in operation less than three months of the year;
(4) activities not visible from the traffic lanes of the main-traveled way;
(5) activities conducted in a building principally used as a residence;
(6) railroad tracks, minor sidings, and passenger depots; or
(7) junk yards, as defined in paragraph (g).
(f) "Junk" means old or scrap hazard signs, copper, brass, rope, rags, batteries, paper, synthetic or organic, trash, rubber debris, waste, or junked, dismantled, or wrecked automobiles or farm or construction machinery or parts thereof, iron, steel, and other old or scrap ferrous or nonferrous material.
(g) "Junk yard" means an establishment, place of business, or place of storage or deposit, which is maintained, operated, or used for storing, keeping, buying, or selling junk, or for the maintenance or operation of an automobile graveyard, and shall include garbage dumps and sanitary fills not regulated by the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, any of which are wholly or partly within one-half mile of any right-of-way of any state trunk highway, including the interstate highways, whether maintained in connection with another business or not, where the waste, body, or discarded material stored is equal in bulk to five or more motor vehicles and which are to be resold for used parts or old iron, metal, glass, or other discarded material.
(h) "Unzoned industrial area" means the land occupied by the regularly used building, parking lot, storage or processing area of an industrial activity, and the land within 1,000 feet thereof which is located on the same side of the highway as the principal part of said activity, and not predominantly used for residential or commercial purposes, and not zoned by state or local law, regulation or ordinance.
Subd. 3. Unauthorized junk yards prohibited. (a) A junk yard may not exist or be operated outside a zoned or unzoned industrial area, including those located on public lands, unless it is screened to effectively conceal it from the view of motorists using the highway. The screening required by this section may be effected by trees, shrubs, or foliage, natural objects, fences or other appropriate means as determined by standards established by the commissioner. Plantings that will eventually achieve effective screening shall be acceptable. Plantings shall be used in connection with any fence or other nonnatural screening device.
(b) A portion of a junk yard that cannot be effectively screened must be removed or relocated under the provisions of this section. A junk yard lawfully existing along a highway that is made a part of the trunk highway system after January 1, 1975, and becomes nonconforming thereby shall be effectively screened or removed or relocated within four years. Any junk yard that comes into existence after July 1, 1971 that does not conform to this section, or that becomes nonconforming after July 1, 1971, or that becomes nonconforming after action by the commissioner pursuant to this section, is hereby declared to be a public nuisance and illegal, and the commissioner may enter upon the land where the junk yard is located and may screen the same, or may relocate or dispose of the junk yard after 90 days' notice to the owner or dealer thereof, if known, or to the owner of the land. In this event, no compensation shall be paid to the owner or dealer or owner of the land, and the commissioner may recover the cost of screening, removal, relocation or disposal from the owner or dealer, if known, or from the owner of the land upon which the junk yard is located. Any costs recovered by the commissioner shall be deposited in the general fund.
(c) None of the articles commonly found in junk yards shall be allowed to remain on the grounds for more than 24 hours unless within the buildings or the properly screened area as provided herein, nor shall any junk in any junk yard be allowed to extend above existing or planned screening so as to be visible from the highway.
Subd. 4. Authority; enforcement. The commissioner shall screen junk yards when required by this section at locations on the right-of-way of the highway or on lands within 1,000 feet of the right-of-way and shall pay for the costs thereof. If screening is not feasible because of economic or topographic reasons, the commissioner shall secure the removal, relocation or disposal of such junk yard by sale, agreement, or other means, and pay for the costs thereof. Notwithstanding the other provisions of this section, if a junk yard exists within one-half mile of the right-of-way of any trunk highway and is visible from the highway, the commissioner may acquire easements for screening purposes up to one-half mile from the edge of the right-of-way of the highway. The commissioner shall acquire such rights and interest in property, personal or real, necessary to carry out the purposes of this section by purchase, gift, or eminent domain proceedings and shall pay just compensation therefor.
Subd. 5. Penalty. The owner or dealer of any junk yard which is declared a public nuisance and illegal under subdivision 3, paragraph (b), or who violates any provision of this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. Each day such a condition exists is a separate offense.
Subd. 6. Agreements with United States. The commissioner is authorized to do all things necessary, including, but not limited to, entering into agreements with the United States or any of its agencies or departments as provided in United States Code, title 23, section 136, with respect to control of junk yards, or any other applicable federal statute, and the rules and regulations promulgated pursuant thereto, to accomplish the purposes of this section and to take such action as may be necessary to obtain all available federal money therefor.
Subd. 6a. Hazard signs must be accepted. A dealer shall accept hazard signs only from a properly identified elected official or employee of the state or a political subdivision, who is acting within the scope of the person's official duties. A dealer is not required to pay or otherwise compensate any person or organization for taking possession of a hazard sign and is not required to take possession at a place away from the site of the dealer's junk yard.
Subd. 7. Other regulation allowed. Nothing in this section shall be construed to limit any right, power or authority to regulate more strictly and control the erection or maintenance of junk yards under the provisions of any other law of this state.
Subd. 8. Citation. This section is the Junk Yard Act.
Subd. 9. [Unnecessary]
1965 c 674 s 1-6; 1971 c 881 s 1; 1973 c 35 s 35; 1974 c 483 s 9; 1975 c 266 s 1; 1981 c 357 s 50; 1984 c 654 art 3 s 54,55; 1991 c 197 s 2,3; 2022 c 55 art 1 s 46
Structure Minnesota Statutes
Chapters 160 - 174A — Transportation
Section 161.04 — Trunk Highway Fund.
Section 161.081 — Highway User Tax, Distribution, Investment.
Section 161.082 — County Turnback Account, Expenditures.
Section 161.083 — Municipal Turnback Account, Expenditure.
Section 161.084 — Surplus Funds In Turnback Accounts.
Section 161.085 — Appropriation From Turnback Accounts.
Section 161.088 — Corridors Of Commerce Program.
Section 161.089 — Report On Dedicated Fund Expenditures.
Section 161.09 — Department Orders, Files, And Records.
Section 161.095 — Travel Expense For Job Applicants.
Section 161.10 — Investigations, Recommendations, Reports.
Section 161.11 — Compensation Insurance.
Section 161.114 — Constitutional Trunk Highways.
Section 161.115 — Additional Trunk Highways.
Section 161.117 — Trunk Highways; Additional Routes.
Section 161.12 — Additional Routes Added; Federal Aid.
Section 161.122 — Restrictions On Marked Trunk Highway 51.
Section 161.1231 — Parking Facilities For I-394.
Section 161.1245 — Highway Construction; Authorizations And Restrictions.
Section 161.125 — Sound Abatement Along Highways.
Section 161.139 — Highway Designation Costs.
Section 161.14 — Names And Designations Of Certain Highways.
Section 161.141 — Northwest Angle, Connecting Highway; Federal Approval.
Section 161.1419 — Mississippi River Parkway Commission.
Section 161.142 — Great River Road.
Section 161.148 — Great River Road, Location Of Route.
Section 161.15 — Specific Location; Limitation On Deviations.
Section 161.16 — Highway Designation, Vacation, Reversion, Survey.
Section 161.162 — Definitions.
Section 161.163 — Highway Project Review.
Section 161.164 — Final Layout Approval Process.
Section 161.165 — Commissioner Action; Interstate Highways.
Section 161.166 — Commissioner Action; Other Highways.
Section 161.167 — Reimbursement Of Expenses.
Section 161.18 — Prior Easements Vest In State.
Section 161.19 — Certain Records Obtained And Filed.
Section 161.20 — General Powers Of Commissioner.
Section 161.202 — Replacement Of Public Lands.
Section 161.23 — Excess Acquisition.
Section 161.231 — Appropriation; Proceeds From State Property.
Section 161.24 — Changes Required By Construction Of Trunk Highway.
Section 161.241 — Relocation Of Railroad Tracks, Acquisition Of Land.
Section 161.242 — Junk Yard Act.
Section 161.25 — Temporary Trunk Highway Detour; Haul Road.
Section 161.26 — Highway Maintained Across Portion Of Adjoining State.
Section 161.261 — Connector Segments With Other States.
Section 161.27 — Trunk Highways Across Bodies Of Water.
Section 161.28 — Altering Public Drainage Ditch By Trunk Highway.
Section 161.29 — Acquiring Toll Bridge For Trunk Highway System.
Section 161.30 — Marking Design.
Section 161.31 — Maps And Pamphlets.
Section 161.315 — Protection Of Public Contracts.
Section 161.32 — Contracting For Work On Trunk Highway.
Section 161.3203 — Contracts For Work For Trunk Highway.
Section 161.3206 — Best-value Contracting Authority.
Section 161.3207 — Construction Manager/general Contractor Contracts; Definitions.
Section 161.3208 — Construction Manager/general Contractor; Authority.
Section 161.3209 — Construction Manager/general Contractor; Procedures.
Section 161.321 — Small Business Contracts.
Section 161.3212 — Working Capital Fund.
Section 161.322 — Payment Of Interest To Contractors.
Section 161.33 — Employee Interest In Contract, Unlawful.
Section 161.34 — Contract Claims Against State.
Section 161.3410 — Design-build Contracts; Definitions.
Section 161.3412 — Design-build Authority.
Section 161.3414 — Determination To Use Design-build Selection Method.
Section 161.3416 — Design-build Notice; Report.
Section 161.3418 — Licensing Requirements.
Section 161.3420 — Design-build Rfq; Selection Team; Evaluation.
Section 161.3422 — Rfp For Design-build.
Section 161.3424 — Replacing Team Members.
Section 161.3426 — Design-build Award.
Section 161.361 — Advance Funding For Trunk Highway Projects.
Section 161.365 — Highway Contract Specifications; Minimum Wage.
Section 161.366 — Construction Contract; Taconite Relief Area.
Section 161.368 — Highway Contracts With Tribal Authorities.
Section 161.37 — Surplus Government Materials.
Section 161.38 — Special Agreements For Highways In Municipalities.
Section 161.39 — Aid To Other Road Authorities And State Departments.
Section 161.391 — Pavement Striping.
Section 161.40 — Joint Facilities With Division Of Emergency Management.
Section 161.41 — Surplus Property Not Needed For Highway Purposes.
Section 161.411 — Sale Of Surplus Earth Material.
Section 161.42 — Leasing Or Sale Of Sounding And Testing Equipment.
Section 161.43 — Relinquishment Of Highway Easement.
Section 161.431 — Leasing Of Highway Easement.
Section 161.433 — Use Of Highway Airspace And Subsurface.
Section 161.434 — Interstate And Trunk Highway Rights-of-way; Limited Use.
Section 161.44 — Relinquishment Of Land No Longer Needed.
Section 161.441 — Land Acquisition Agreement With Others.
Section 161.442 — Reconveyance To Former Owner.
Section 161.45 — Utility On Highway Right-of-way; Relocation.
Section 161.46 — Reimbursement Of Utility.
Section 161.462 — Fiber Collaboration Database.
Section 161.465 — Reimbursement For Fire Services.