Wal-Mart says their supporters are silent
Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- With Wal-Mart foes claiming to have gathered
22,000 signatures of voters who oppose building a store at the closed
Crest View campus, you might think no one supports the giant retailer.
Think again.
“There’s really nothing wrong with a Wal-Mart,” said resident Jim Martin,
who lives within walking distance of where the company plans to build a
150,000-square-foot retail complex on Talbert Avenue.
Martin said he not only looks forward to shopping so close to his home,
but he’s also sympathetic to the money crunch that compelled the
property’s owner, the Ocean View School District, and the city to welcome
Wal-Mart with open arms.
“You’ve got bills to pay, right?,” he asked.
City officials expect the store to bring in about $400,000 per year in
tax revenues. That’s on top of the $400,000 Wal-Mart’s developer, Arnel
Retail Group, would pay annually to the school district on a 65-year
lease, store spokeswoman Cynthia Lin said.
Martin isn’t the only resident who favors Wal-Mart, Lin said.
“Clearly there are some people who are against the project,” she said.
“[But] we’ve also heard from residents who are for the project.”
Lin offered a list of nine supporters, other than Martin. The list did
not include City Council members whom critics consider Wal-Mart’s
strongest supporters -- Ralph Bauer, Shirley Dettloff, Dave Garofalo, and
Pam Julien.
It remains to be seen whether the store’s friends outnumber its foes,
especially in light of the fact that at the Aug. 2 council meeting,
members of Crest View United, a group of residents dedicated to keeping
the giant retailer out of their neighborhood, announced they had
collected 22,000 signatures for a ballot initiative to rezone the site
from commercial back to residential. The county’s Registrar of Voters has
until mid-September to verify the petition, a city clerk said.
The Wal-Mart faithful aren’t as well-organized or as vocal as the
opposition, Lin said, but that shouldn’t surprise anyone.
“People who tend to speak out tend to be people who are against a
project,” she said.
Even if the signatures are verified, a special election may not be
necessary because Wal-Mart officials still haven’t decided whether to
build the store considering some “onerous” city restrictions placed on
Wal-Mart’s operation, such as limiting delivery hours, Lin said.
But if the retailer does move ahead with its plans, then company
officials would welcome the opportunity to argue Wal-Mart’s merits and to
let the voters decide, Lin said.
“The bottom line is we hope Huntington Beach recognizes that Wal-Mart has
contributed to other communities elsewhere,” she said. “Hopefully, we can
do the same thing here.”
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