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The RM of Meota No. 468 is governed by an elected municipal council and an appointed administrator that meets on the first Wednesday of every month. [3] The reeve of the RM is Sherry Jimmy while its administrator is Kirk Morrison. [3] The RM's office is located in Meota. [3]
Until 2016 North Dakota highway signage had an "N" and a "D" in the top corners and a Native American profile, based on Lakota policeman Marcellus Red Tomahawk; [1] [2] since 2016 the marker has had "North Dakota" on a black background, the state in outline, and the highway number within the state outline. This transition to new signs is a slow ...
To number rural section line roads in the state the rough geographical centerlines of the state were designated as "Main Street" (running east–west) and "Main Avenue" (running north–south). Roads are assigned an increasing number moving out from these centerlines with the number of the road determined by the number of miles it is from the ...
Highway 769: Waterway(s) ... It is on the shores of Jackfish Lake in the Rural Municipality of Meota No. 468. It is approximately 40 kilometres (25 mi) north of North ...
Meota (2016 population: 304) is a village in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan within the Rural Municipality of Meota No. 468 and Census Division No. 17. The village name is derived from the Cree phrase Meotate or Mo-Was-In-Ota, meaning "good place to camp" or "it is good here."
Number Length (mi) [1] Length (km) Southern or western terminus Northern or eastern terminus Formed Removed Notes I-29: 217.517: 350.060 I-29/U.S. 81 at South Dakota state line
U.S. Highway 52 (US 52) is a 362-mile-long (583 km) United States Numbered Highway in the U.S. state of North Dakota, which travels from the Canada–United States border east to the Red River at Fargo. The highway connects the cities of Minot and Fargo and travels concurrent with Interstate 94 (I-94) between Jamestown and the Minnesota state line.
North Dakota Highway 13 (ND 13) is an approximately 205-mile-long (330 km) highway that serves southeast North Dakota.For the most part, the highway is a rural two-lane road, but for the final 12 miles (19 km) east of I-29 it is a four-lane divided road.