Turns out that you can fight City Hall after all — and actually win.
Mayor Chris Coleman said Thursday that he was dropping plans to install parking meters along St. Paul's popular Grand Avenue, after City Council Member Dave Thune killed council support by saying he no longer backed the proposal in the face of sweeping community opposition.
Coleman said he remained convinced that meters would increase customer turnover for Grand Avenue's many businesses by opening up more parking spaces. Meters would also encourage more people to walk or use transit to get there, he said.
"But it is clear that, in the absence of council support, this proposal cannot go forward," the mayor said.
He added that "in light of the strong and vocal opposition that we've seen expressed over the last couple months," he didn't see an opening for new parking meters outside of downtown "any time in the near future."
Coleman noted that the leading candidates for Thune's seat in Tuesday's election, DFLers Rebecca Noecker and Darren Tobolt, also opposed meters on Grand.
Thune, who is not seeking re-election after 20 years representing the east end of Grand Avenue, said he concluded he couldn't support the plan without a community consensus. He said there wasn't enough time to build the necessary support before the end of the year, when the city's 2016 budget containing the plan must be finalized by the council.
Both Thune and Coleman attended a packed community meeting last week, where several hundred people let them know that they didn't like the parking meter plan. They shouted down the mayor and loudly booed the few in the crowd who spoke in favor of meters.