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300
rage against Wal-Mart
Posted
on Thursday, September
08, 2005
MIRAMAR
300 rage against
Wal-Mart
Hundreds of
residents pack Miramar's City Commission
Chamber to oppose a new Wal-Mart near
their homes.
BY
NATALIE P. McNEAL
nmcneal@herald.com
More than 300 residents formed a
standing-room-only crowd at the Miramar
City Hall Wednesday night, ready for a
fight they'd been awaiting for months.
The residents were there to persuade
city commissioners to reject plans for a
new Wal-Mart supercenter at the corner
of Miramar Parkway and Flamingo Road.
Residents of nearby subdivisions,
especially Monarch Lakes, have been
fighting the plan for months, saying
that it would lead to increased traffic
and crime and lower property property
values. They have created anti-Wal-Mart
clothing and a letter-writing campaign,
and they have dedicated the Monarch
Lakes website to the effort to stop the
world's largest retailer.
Wednesday was the designated night
for commissioners to vote, but by 11:30
p.m. they had heard from Wal-Mart's
attorney and the neighbors' lawyer. But
they had not yet voted.
By then, some tired residents had
already started heading home as
television news cameras recorded the
meeting.
Earlier in the evening, Wal-Mart's
lawyer had asked newly elected
Commissioner John Moore to abstain from
voting because he had voted against the
project when he was a member of the
city's planning and zoning board.
Moore declined to abstain, declaring
that he could be fair and impartial.
The zoning decision for Wal-Mart is
''quasijudicial,'' meaning that
commissioners are supposed to make their
decision based strictly on facts
presented at the meeting.
Wal-Mart wanted the City Commission
to change the zoning for its site from
rural to community business so the
company could build a 24-hour,
200,000-square-foot supercenter at the
northeast corner of Miramar Parkway and
Flamingo Road.
Commissioners approved the proposal
in an initial vote in June but postponed
the final vote to get more research on
the store's impact. The reports found
that the store does agree with the
city's future land-use plans and the
majority of the development code.
City staffers also recommended 24
conditions Wal-Mart should meet.
They include limitations on the hours
of truck deliveries, keeping uniformed
security personnel on site and no
Wal-Mart trucks on sections of Monarch
Lakes Boulevard and Miramar Boulevard.
The company already agreed to
eliminate a tire and lube center and a
liquor store from the plans to appease
nearby communities.
The battle is more than just talk.
Since Wal-Mart began its push for west
Miramar, both sides have launched
campaigns.
The Monarch Lakes subdivision, across
the street from the proposed site, has a
website, www.monarchlakes.org,
devoted to its campaign. Homeowners have
picketed City Hall, worn ''No Wal-Mart''
buttons and adopted the slogan ``Monarch
Lakes, not Wal-Mart Lakes.''
In response, this summer, Wal-Mart
mailed out more than 40,000 glossy
fliers, lobbying on behalf of the
supercenter moving to the city.
The company said it got back 1,400
cards from people in favor of the store.
The brochures were created by a Texas
firm that has also worked on advertising
campaigns for President Bush.
Copyright 2005 Knight Ridder
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