Wisconsin Code § 86.195

Specific information signs
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(1) DEFINITIONS.
Unless defined differently in this section, the terms used in this
section are defined in accordance with the manual of uniform
traffic control devices adopted by the department under s. 84.02
(4) (e). In this section:
(am) “Business” includes an attraction, whether public or private, described in sub. (3) (e).
(ar) “Business sign” means a separately attached sign
mounted on the rectangular sign panel to show the brand, symbol,
trademark, or name, or combination of these, for a motorist service available on a crossroad at or near an interchange or an
intersection.
(c) “Motorist service” means a business which qualifies under
sub. (3).
(d) “Specific information sign” means a rectangular sign
panel which displays:
1. One or more of the words “GAS”, “FOOD”, “LODGING”, “CAMPING”, or “ATTRACTION”;
2. Directional information; and
3. One or more business signs.
(2) SIGNS AND FEES. (a) Except as provided in par. (ag), the
department may authorize the erection and maintenance of a specific information sign upon the request of any person within the
right-of-way of a federal-aid primary highway or within the rightof-way of a federal-aid secondary highway under the jurisdiction
of the department, except that no specific information sign may
be erected within any city, village or town unless the specific information sign is erected in compliance with rules promulgated
by the department for such signs in a city, village or town.
(ag) On and after May 8, 1990, the department may not authorize the erection of a specific information sign under par. (a) unless the highway is one of the following highways under the jurisdiction of the department:
1. I 43 from I 90 at Beloit to USH 41 at Green Bay.
2. I 90 from the state line in Rock County to the state line in
La Crosse County.
3. I 94 from the state line in Kenosha County to the state line
in St. Croix County.
4. STH 11 from STH 81 west of Monroe to STH 50 at
Delavan.
5. STH 11 from I 43 at Elkhorn to STH 32 at Racine.
6. STH 13 from STH 97 at Marshfield to STH 182 at Park
Falls.
7. STH 16 from STH 67 at Oconomowoc to I 94 at
Waukesha.
8. STH 21 from I 94 north of Tomah to CTH “Z” in the town
of Strongs Prairie in Adams County and from STH 13 north of
the village of Friendship in Adams County to I 41 at Oshkosh.
9. STH 23 from STH 44 at Ripon to I 43 at Sheboygan.
10. STH 26 from I 90 at Janesville to USH 41 south of
Oshkosh.
11. STH 29 from I 41 at Green Bay to I 94 northwest of Elk
Mound.
12. STH 33 from I 41 at Allenton to STH 32 at Port
Washington.
13. STH 36 from STH 50 at Springfield to STH 100 southwest of Milwaukee.
14. STH 50 from STH 120 at Lake Geneva to STH 32 at
Kenosha.
15. USH 53 from I 94 at Eau Claire to I 535 at Superior.
16. STH 57 from I 43 at Green Bay to Sturgeon Bay.
16m. STH 172 from I 43 southeast of Green Bay to I 41 at
Ashwaubenon.
17. USH 2 from USH 53 east of Superior to the state line in
Iron County.
18. USH 8 from the state line in Polk County to USH 53 west
of Cameron.
19. USH 8 from USH 51 southeast of Bradley to STH 47 at
Monico.
20. USH 10 from STH 13 south of Marshfield to STH 42 at
Manitowoc.
21. USH 12 from the state line in Walworth County to STH
67 north of Elkhorn.
22. USH 12 from I 90 east of Madison to I 90 north of Wisconsin Dells.
23. USH 18 from STH 35 at Prairie du Chien to USH 151
east of Dodgeville.
24. USH 41 from STH 181 at Milwaukee to the state line in
Marinette County.
25. USH 45 from I 41 at Richfield to STH 28 at Kewaskum.
26. USH 45 from I 41 at the city of Oshkosh to USH 8 at
Monico.
27. USH 51 from STH 78 north of Portage to USH 2 at
Hurley.
28. USH 63 from I 94 south of Baldwin to USH 2 west of
Ashland.
29. STH 64 from the state line in St. Croix County to the
easternmost junction with USH 63 east of New Richmond.
30. USH 78 from I 90 south of Portage to USH 51 north of
Portage.
31. USH 141 from I 43 northwest of Green Bay to the state
line in Marinette County.
32. USH 151 from STH 11 south of Dickeyville to CTH
“WH” northeast of Fond du Lac in Fond du Lac County.
33. STH 441 between the Roland Kampo Bridge and I 41 in
the city of Appleton, designated as the Tri-County Expressway, in
Calumet, Outagamie, and Winnebago counties.
34. USH 53 from I 90 at the city of Onalaska to STH 35
north of Holmen.
35. USH 14 from USH 12/18 at Madison to STH 138 at
Oregon.
36. USH 12 from CTH “P” southeast of the city of Whitewater in Walworth County to Tri-County Road in Rock County.
(b) 1. Subject to sub. (4) (c), upon the request of any person,
the department may authorize the installation and maintenance of
a business sign on an existing specific information sign.
3. The person requesting installation of a business sign shall
provide, at his or her expense, a business sign which meets specifications established by the department.
4. Nothing in this section prohibits a person requesting installation of a business sign under sub. (3) (e) from advertising or
displaying information on any sign under s. 84.30, subject to any
limitation on such signs under s. 84.30.
(c) A person who requests the erection or installation of a sign
under par. (a) or (b) shall pay to the department an annual permit
fee of $40 to cover administrative costs and the cost of inspection
of the signs erected or installed under this section. In addition,
the person requesting a sign under par. (a) or (b) shall pay a fee for
the manufacture, installation and maintenance of the specific information sign and the installation and maintenance of the business sign.
(d) The department shall contract for the erection, installation
and maintenance of signs under this section. The department
may require the contractor to provide liability insurance for purposes of this section.
(3) MOTORIST SERVICES. Specific information signs may

only include business signs for the following categories of motorist services: “GAS”, “FOOD”, “LODGING”, “CAMPING”,
and “ATTRACTION”. To qualify for display on a specific information sign a business must meet the following standards for the
respective category of motorist service:
(a) “GAS” shall have:
1. Vehicle services including fuel, oil and water;
2. Restroom facilities and drinking water;
3. Continuous operation of at least 16 hours a day, 7 days a
week for freeways and expressways, and continuous operation of
at least 12 hours a day, 7 days a week for other highways, provided
automotive fuel is available under the energy fuel allocation program established under P.L. 93-159; and
4. Public telephone.
(b) “FOOD” shall have:
1. Licensing or approval, where required:
2. Regular operation at least 5 days a week, opening for service no later than 10 a.m. and remaining open until at least 7
p.m.;
3. Fifty percent of the sales price, as defined in s. 77.51
(15b), of the business is from the sale of food and food ingredients, as defined in s. 77.51 (3t), that are taxable under subch. III
of ch. 77 or that are bakery items produced by the seller; and
4. Public telephone.
(c) “LODGING” shall have:
1. Licensing or approval, where required;
2. Adequate sleeping accommodations; and
3. Public telephone.
(d) “CAMPING” shall have:
1. Licensing or approval, where required;
2. Adequate parking accommodations; and
3. Modern sanitary facilities and drinking water.
(e) “ATTRACTION” shall have all of the following:
1. A primary purpose of providing amusement, historical,
cultural, or leisure activities to the public.
2. Regional significance. For purposes of this subdivision,
an agricultural research station owned or managed by a university
has regional significance regardless of the number of visitors to
the station.
3. Adequate parking accommodations.
(4) LOCATION. (a) Specific information signs shall be located so as to take advantage of natural terrain, to have the least
impact on the scenic environment and to avoid visual conflict
with other signs within the highway right-of-way.
(b) The relative location of successive specific information
signs near a particular intersection shall be in the following order,
as seen by the traveling public: “ATTRACTION”, “CAMPING”,
“LODGING”, “FOOD” and “GAS”.
(c) No business sign under sub. (3) (e) may be erected or
maintained on a highway for a business that is more directly
reached by any other highway on which specific information
signs are authorized under sub. (2). No more than one business
sign under sub. (3) (e) may be erected or maintained on a highway, for each direction of travel, for the same business.
(5) CRITERIA. (a) Distance to services. 1. Except as provided in subds. 2. to 4., a motorist service may not be located
more than 3 miles from the federal-aid primary or secondary
highway on which the specific information sign for the motorist
service is erected.
2. Except as provided in subds. 3. and 4., if no business in the
category of motorist service is available within the 3-mile limit,
the limit in subd. 1. may be extended in 3-mile increments to a
maximum distance of 15 miles from the federal-aid primary or
secondary highway until a business in the category of motorist
service is reached.
3. Except as provided in subd. 4., if no business in the category of motorist service is available within the 3-mile limit, the
limit in subd. 1. may, on or after May 8, 1990, be extended to a
maximum distance of not more than 5 miles from the highway.
4. A business in the category of motorist service specified in
sub. (3) (e) may not be located more than 30 miles from the federal-aid primary or secondary highway on which the specific information sign for the motorist service is erected.
(b) Number of signs permitted. No more than 4 specific information signs for each category of motorist service may be erected
along an approach to an interchange or intersection. No specific
information sign may contain more than 6 business signs.
(c) Conformity with discrimination laws. Each business identified as a motorist service on a specific information sign shall, as
a condition of eligibility for erection, installation and maintenance of a sign under this section, give written assurance to the
department that the business conforms with all applicable laws
concerning the provisions of public accommodations without regard to race, religion, color, sex or national origin.
(6) COMPOSITION. (a) Specific information signs and business signs shall have a blue reflectorized background with a white
reflectorized border and white reflectorized legend. Sign panels
may be illuminated.
(b) The design, lettering, spacing and size of specific information signs and business signs shall conform with the federal standards on specific information signs adopted under 23 USC 131
(f) on November 1, 1982 and with the manual of uniform traffic
control devices adopted by the department under s. 84.02 (4) (e).
(7) EXIT RAMP SIGNS. If motorist services are not visible
from the ramp terminal at single exit interchanges on freeways
and expressways, specific information signs shall be installed
along the ramp or at the ramp terminal and may be provided
along the crossroad.
(8) SEASONAL SERVICES. Any sign for a “LODGING” or
“CAMPING” motorist service which is operated on a seasonal
basis shall be removed or covered during off seasons. The cost of
removal and replacement or covering and uncovering shall be included in the fee paid.
(9) SIGN REMOVAL. (a) A sign may be removed upon the following grounds:
1. Failure to comply with the applicable motor service standards under sub. (3).
2. Failure to comply with the assurance of nondiscrimination
required by sub. (5) (c).
3. Failure to pay the permit fee or the fee for the erection, installation or maintenance of a sign.
(b) Contested cases concerning removals under this subsection shall be heard and decided by the division of hearings and
appeals.
(c) Sign removal shall not affect a sign requester’s liability for
unpaid fees.
(10) COMPLIANCE WITH FEDERAL LAW. (a) Subsections (2)
to (8) are adapted from and in substantial conformity with the
federal standards promulgated by the U.S. secretary of transportation under 23 USC 109 (d), 131 (f) and 315 as codified in 23
CFR 655.301 to 655.310 (1980).
(b) If, after November 1, 1982, the federal standards become
more restrictive, the department shall submit proposed legislation
to the appropriate standing committees of the legislature, as designated by the presiding officer of each house to bring this section
into compliance with the federal standards. The department may
promulgate an emergency administrative rule under s. 227.24

which supersedes this section until such time as the legislature
acts on the legislation submitted under this paragraph or until the
expiration of the effective period of the rule under s. 227.24 (1)
(c) or (2), whichever comes first.

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