Logo
Navigation
Navigation
Logo

*
Weather Magnet
Logo Online news and information for the Rhinelander region
Home | News | Sports | Obituaries | Opinion | Community | Announcements | Photo Galleries | Calendar | Classifieds/Marketplace
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Hearing on Minocqua Wal-Mart Super Center Wednesday

By Daily News Staff

Email a friend  feed   Printer friendly  Comments

Want to have your say on the proposed Minocqua Wal-Mart SuperCenter?

A public hearing on the controversial project will be held in Minocqua August 23 starting at 6 p.m. in the Lakeland High School gymnasium.

ADVERTISEMENT
*

This will be the second public hearing held on the project, which involves the construction of a 155,000 square foot store on Highway 70.

On June 28, the county planning and zoning committee spent four hours listening to testimony on the project but ultimately delayed a decision on the conditional use permit due to “unanswered questions.”

Oneida County Planning and Zoning Director Karl Jennrich said this week the store's conditional use permit application is complete and a second public hearing can now be held.

“I know some people aren't happy but I have deemed the application complete,” he said, alluding to opponents of the SuperCenter who believe Wal-Mart officials haven't given the committee enough information to make a decision on the permit application.

Prior to the public hearing, the committee will tour the site.

 Tell us what you think...
 Comments »

Steve Grosklaus wrote on August 19, 2006 8:50 PM:"Why should Trigs have the monopoly on the grocery business? Minocqua's downtown is safe, it is for the tourists not the locals. The towntown offers very little for those who live in the northwoods year-round. Wal-mart has been in town since 1996 and look, the downtown is still there. Many tax dollars are generated by Wal-Mart"

Staci Peterson wrote on August 19, 2006 2:11 PM:"Great -this should elimintate all those Northern customers coming to Rhinelander!"

Dick Powers wrote on August 19, 2006 11:49 AM:"Minocqua has a vibrant downtown area. Wal-Mart does not treat its employees well, and destroys vibrant downtowns. Just take a look at what happened to Rhinelander when Wal-Mart opened. They brought in low-income jobs and downtown is dead. "

David Gwidt wrote on August 18, 2006 9:28 PM:"For years the Minocqua merchants have gotten rich off of the public due to lack of real competition. Please bring in Wal-Mart and let free enterprise work. Give the consumer a break!!!"


The comments above are from readers. In no way do they represent the views of the Rhinelander Daily News.

 Post a comment (150 word limit) »
We will not post reader comments containing racial, religious or personal attacks, slander, profanity, e-mail addresses, mailing addresses, phone numbers or Web site addresses that are for personal or promotional gain.
Thank you for your comments! Once your comments are approved, they will appear on the site.
 


LOCAL NEWS ALL LOCAL NEWS >
Hearing on Minocqua Wal-Mart Super Center Wednesday
Want to have your say on the proposed Minocqua Wal-Mart SuperCenter? READ MORE >

Half of charges against former probation officer dismissed

Symphony performance in jeopardy

SPORTS ALL SPORTS >
Scoreboard
Horseshoes READ MORE >

Prep Sports

Phelps sets world record in 200-meter butterfly

BUSINESS ALL BUSINESS >
Getting started
Entrepreneurs learning how to put plans in motion READ MORE >

Art world welcoming Gruett

Downtown logo reflects history of community

COMMUNITY ALL COMMUNITY >
Regional historical society convention in Lake Tomahawk Sept. 9
The Lake Tomahawk Historical Society will host the 2006 Northwoods Regional Convention of the Wisconsin Historical Society and Wisconsin Council for Local History on Saturday, September 9. READ MORE >

Pageant finalist -- Gabriella Morrill

Band workshop next week

OUTDOORSALL OUTDOORS >
Think Pink
Northwoods sunsets are tough to beat READ MORE >

Ospreys settling in the south

Trespassing in Bear Country

OPINIONALL OPINIONS >
Let's look before we leap (08.16.2006)
The conviction that the United States ought to pull out of Iraq is growing. It is not (yet) the opinion of a majority of the American people; polls indicating that a majority is seriously dissatisfied with the way things are going there don't translate readily into a conclusion that we ought to bug out. But the Democrats are slowly pulling together around that proposition, and a few prominent conservatives (including Bill Buckley) have joined them in throwing in the towel. READ MORE >

OUR VIEW -- Revisit and localize ‘No Child Left Behind' law

Pence-Hutchinson bill creates hope on immigration (08.13.2006)

 
 
ADVERTISEMENT
Footer
The Daily NewsThe Forest RepublicanNorthwoods Business Watch