[All] Waterloo Council Delays Costco to Address Community Concerns!
Eleanor Grant
eleanor7000 at gmail.com
Tue Apr 8 17:25:19 EDT 2014
Kevin - friend - if you could take off those rose-coloured glasses for a
minute:)
Costco is APPROVED. Only Mark Whaley voted against that. Nothing else can
go on that land now. The pressure to speed up the study will be enormous.
Who is this Commissioner of Integrated Planning and Public Works? Can s/he
be trusted not to approve a transportation report that's as big a joke as
the one presented last night by staffer Joel Kotter (that you were shaking
your head all the way through)? It's the Commissioner that has to be
satisfied, not the people.
There don't exist any transportation solutions that could accommodate the
thing. If the study did its job it would conclude that. But it won't.
We'll end up with a half-baked outcome that DOESN'T protect Wilmot Line and
the ESLs, and DOESN'T keep Erb's Rd an open way between city and township.
A lot of disastrous outcomes .....
Talk Thurs.
Eleanor
On Apr 8, 2014 4:53 PM, "Kevin Thomason" <kevinthomason at mac.com> wrote:
> Wow! I'm thrilled to let you know that at last night's Council meeting,
> Waterloo City Councillors listened to our community and voted to delay the
> proposed West side Waterloo Costco development to undertake a detailed
> study of traffic issues (vehicle, cycling, and pedestrian), involve the
> community in proper public engagement, and implement the required
> transportation infrastructure before allowing Costco to proceed.
>
> Congratulations and thank you to everyone (including a significant number
> of GREN folks) throughout our community who spoke up and expressed concerns
> about this proposed high-volume, big-box development. Fourteen delegations
> from Waterloo, Wilmot, and Kitchener did a great job presenting a myriad of
> issues to City Council. Costco Vice-President Jeff Ishida tried to address
> several areas of concern however, it was clear that many unanswered
> questions remained.
>
> It was amazing how delegations presented a broad spectrum of community
> concerns including traffic, financial, environmental, landfill, EMS, and
> cultural issues during the four hour long meeting. Community members made
> it clear that Waterloo would not succeed in the future if our city faced
> serious congestion and gridlock daily, neighbourhoods were compromised, and
> rare environmentally sensitive lands that have been protected through
> decades of efforts were overwhelmed by traffic.
>
> City Staff and consultants did their best to defend Costco's development
> plans and their recommendations to proceed immediately, however even after
> hours of discussion there were too many unanswered questions, too many
> vague responses, and too many outstanding issues - including considerable
> concerns about the lack of public engagement on this large development
> proposal that stood to negatively affect so many people.
>
> The standing room-only crowd filling the Council Chambers heard the Mayor
> and nearly every City Councillor speak about their serious concerns with
> this proposed Costco and the predicted impacts to the West side. In the
> end, Councillors voted against their own City Staff recommendation and sent
> a clear message that only after outstanding issues are addressed, and
> solutions have been found, completed, and are fully in place, would the
> Costco development be permitted to proceed.
>
> *The Approved Motion*
>
> Specifically, the complete holding provision motion introduced by
> Councillor Karen Scian, places the entire Costco store, gas bar and
> surrounding development on hold until:
> a) An integrated multi-modal traffic analysis (including existing and
> planned development) has been completed and accepted to the satisfaction of
> the Commissioner of Integrated Planning and Public works;
> b) Public open houses and engagement has been held regarding the
> integrated traffic plan; and,
> c) That the necessary transportation improvements have been completed.
>
> The funding and study is to begin in 2014, will involve co-ordination
> between local and regional governments, and is expected to ensure the
> protection of vulnerable neighbourhoods and environmental areas.
>
> *Community Engagement*
>
> It has been incredible to see how quickly and strongly our community
> rallied in recent days upon learning the full details about Costco's
> proposal and the ensuing issues - particularly the severe traffic
> congestion forecast over such a large area. While most people in Waterloo
> would like to see a Costco warehouse store in our city, the proposed Erb
> St. W. location listed in the City Official Plan has proved to be an
> incredibly constrained and challenging site. Few could fathom that such a
> massive Costco drawing an estimated 5,500 cars/day would be built on only a
> two lane road with no other accesses or road infrastructure for up to four
> years in such an already congested area.
>
> Councillor Scian reported receiving more than 350 e-mails in the past week
> alone on this development proposal. Neighbourhood associations, community
> groups, and citizens met with Staff and Councillors to try to understand
> forecasted impacts, and last week on very short notice Costco Executives
> and consultants flew from Virginia and Ottawa to meet with representatives
> from area neighbourhood associations to better understand our concerns.
> Costco has a global reputation for being a responsible corporate citizen
> and an excellent employer. So far our experience with their team reflects
> this excellence. I am optimistic that Costco and its
> developers/consultants will work with our community, City Staff, and
> Councillors to find the needed solutions and best path forward.
>
> *Thank You and Next Steps*
>
> Thank you to everyone, every group, neighbourhood association, and
> organization that took the time to learn about this development proposal,
> it's forecasted impacts, and spoke up with concerns. Our city leaders have
> responded and we now have a unique opportunity to pause and reflect on the
> current state of the West side of Waterloo. We have a chance to envision
> the future and develop a plan that will create the community that we want.
>
> We need to be innovative, creative and visionary. With a limited land
> supply remaining we must carefully consider the future - what we want the
> Westside to become, how we want to travel, how much congestion is
> acceptable, and what our legacy will be for future generations.
>
> At this point it is too early to say how long it will take to develop and
> implement this plan to address the community's concerns. It will likely
> take several months to complete the integrated plan and perhaps several
> years before all the solutions and infrastructure can be put into place
> before Costco and the surrounding developments can proceed.
>
> Please share any thoughts or ideas on how we can develop a world-class
> plan for the West side. Congratulations again, to everyone who sent
> letters, attended meetings, talked with neighbours, and worked so hard to
> help ensure the best possible future for our community.
>
> Kevin.
>
> -------------------------------------
>
> Kevin Thomason
>
> 1115 Cedar Grove Road
> Waterloo, Ontario Canada N2J 3Z4
>
> Phone: (519) 888-0519
> Mobile Phone: (519) 240-1648
> Twitter: @kthomason
> E-mail: kevinthomason at mac.com
>
> -----------------------------------------
>
>
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