
The Letters to the Editor in today's Star are all about Walmart. People seem to either love or hate the company. Walmart obviously didn't grow into the world's largest corporation without generating controversy. The hard part is that a city government has to treat them just like K-Mart, Nordstrom's, Macy's, Home Depot or Target when it comes to applying our zoning and building standards.
Not that citizens aren't entitled to their opinions about what kind of stores they do or do not want in their community. But it is the marketplace, in the end, that decides that. Yes, some cities do recruit or even subsidize retailers they consider "desirable" for a variety of reasons (income to the city, number of jobs, convenience for residents or just status -- 'we have something you don't!') But no one is talking about recruiting or subsidizing Walmart here. They have a signed lease with the property owner. They are deciding whether to occupy the existing K-Mart store or tear the building down and build a new store.
It is true that the City has undertaken an ambitious and controversial effort to revise its old zoning rules because Walmart was coming to Victoria Avenue. But that's because in 2005, the City Council adopted a new 20 year community vision that specifically discouraged Victoria as a site for "'big box', mega-block, auto-oriented strip development and the traffic patterns it generates" and instead supported "healthy economic investment in walkable blocks, connected to better serve the surrounding neighborhoods." The City moved to spell out the rules to implement those lofty, but not very specific goals, prior to Walmart's application being processed.
Walmart still hasn't applied. But we now have a first draft of the new rules and are taking to the City Council tonight a proposal to finalize those rules. That way, Walmart or any other retailer will have to follow the same rules when it comes to building new stores on Victoria.
Reasonable people can certainly disagree about what those rules should be. And reasonable people can certainly disagree on whether they personally want to see a Walmart store on Victoria Avenue. But I hope all reasonable people can agree that we should have clear and consistent rules about what is and is not allowed to be built on Victoria -- regardless of the company that will occupy the building.
Applying our zonings laws is not a popularity contest. Once we agree on the new rules, they should apply to everyone -- whether people like Walmart or not.
Not that citizens aren't entitled to their opinions about what kind of stores they do or do not want in their community. But it is the marketplace, in the end, that decides that. Yes, some cities do recruit or even subsidize retailers they consider "desirable" for a variety of reasons (income to the city, number of jobs, convenience for residents or just status -- 'we have something you don't!') But no one is talking about recruiting or subsidizing Walmart here. They have a signed lease with the property owner. They are deciding whether to occupy the existing K-Mart store or tear the building down and build a new store.
It is true that the City has undertaken an ambitious and controversial effort to revise its old zoning rules because Walmart was coming to Victoria Avenue. But that's because in 2005, the City Council adopted a new 20 year community vision that specifically discouraged Victoria as a site for "'big box', mega-block, auto-oriented strip development and the traffic patterns it generates" and instead supported "healthy economic investment in walkable blocks, connected to better serve the surrounding neighborhoods." The City moved to spell out the rules to implement those lofty, but not very specific goals, prior to Walmart's application being processed.
Walmart still hasn't applied. But we now have a first draft of the new rules and are taking to the City Council tonight a proposal to finalize those rules. That way, Walmart or any other retailer will have to follow the same rules when it comes to building new stores on Victoria.
Reasonable people can certainly disagree about what those rules should be. And reasonable people can certainly disagree on whether they personally want to see a Walmart store on Victoria Avenue. But I hope all reasonable people can agree that we should have clear and consistent rules about what is and is not allowed to be built on Victoria -- regardless of the company that will occupy the building.
Applying our zonings laws is not a popularity contest. Once we agree on the new rules, they should apply to everyone -- whether people like Walmart or not.
