Residents of Sask. town concerned with new downtown layout, 'they've ruined it'
A group of Coronach residents is raising concerns about recent changes the town has made to the layout of some of its downtown streets.
Longtime resident Valerie Rousseau loved the way the streets of her hometown has looked for nearly 100 years.
“Centre Street is the heart of our community,” she told CTV News. “There was nothing wrong with the way the street was before and it makes absolutely no sense what they’ve done to our town,” she said.
“They’ve ruined it.”
In 2020, the Town of Coronach received a federal government grant to pay for the replacement of aging water and sewer pipes below five town streets.
Knowing major construction was going to take place, the Coronach council decided to use the opportunity to revitalize the downtown core in the process.
“We wanted to make the space look a little less sterile,” said councillor and Deputy Mayor Leanne Kuski.
“There was a lot of concrete, cement and then buildings.”
During the pandemic, the town held information nights, giving residents a look at multiple concept plans.
Kuski says councilors went with the option residents liked the most.
“We wanted to add some places for flowers and add green space,” she said.
Some of the changes included added sidewalk space on Centre Street, 1st Avenue and 1st Street West, while also creating “teardrop-style” pedestrian pads at those intersections as well.
The result was the slight narrowing of the road removing the ability to angle park in some areas.
The group of residents feel there was a lack of oversight and the changes have created more traffic and pedestrian safety concerns — specifically in front of some businesses including the post office and a local church.
“We need room to park,” said Ernest Grainger. “Not parallel park. [People] want to angle park, they want to go to services and do these things.”
“We don’t want to be like Regina,” he added.
Town residents went as far as staging a protest last Wednesday as contractors arrived to start pouring concrete following the replacement of the infrastructure in May 2023.
“There’s still time to change it,” Rousseau said. “We all realize there’s a major cost involved but we’ve had townspeople say they’ll do it for free.”
“It’s a tough choice, money wise,” Grainger said. “Whatever you take to the people paying your wages and electing you. I think they missed a major step.”
The town originally budgeted $5.7 million for the entire downtown renewal project.
But Kuski says cost pressures created by inflation after the grant was approved forced council to scale back its vision by about 40 per cent.
Despite decreasing how much work would be done, the final cost rose to over $7 million before shovels broke ground last year.
Town officials did admit some mistakes were made in planning.
“[Concerns] were addressed,” Kuski said. “We took out the green space [in front of the post office] and put in parallel parking.”
The current state of the streets mid-construction does create some inconvenience and traffic issues, Kuski said, but she hopes the confusion clears when the work is done.
“Paving all the way down [1st Avenue] to the post office actually gives more space for cars to pass,” she said.
The streets remained bones of concrete sidewalk and gravel roads on Thursday.
Town councilors hoped as the new downtown took shape, residents would better understand the plans and they would come to love it again.
But Grainger feels that would be difficult.
“It’s just a disaster,” he said.
Construction will be completed later this year.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
B.C. to open 'highly secure' involuntary care facilities
B.C. will be opening “highly secure facilities” for people with addiction and mental health issues in the province, officials said Sunday.
Trump's campaign says candidate is safe after gunshots were reported in his vicinity in Florida
Donald Trump's campaign says he is safe after gunshots were reported in his vicinity Sunday afternoon in Florida.
They came from Jamaica for work, now they're homeless and out thousands of dollars in lost wages
Abuse of Canada’s temporary foreign worker program has left a group of carpenters from Jamaica 'destitute' after an Ottawa company refused to pay them for nearly half a year of work.
Montreal bars, restaurants react to Quebec bill to regulate merchant tipping requests
Quebec tabled a bill on Thursday that would regulate how merchants determine suggested tips, forcing businesses to calculate them based on the price before tax. Restaurant staff and management are divided on the policy.
TIFF audience prizes for 'Life of Chuck,' Hip doc; Rankin among Canadian winners
'The Life of Chuck,' an offbeat film by writer-director Mike Flanagan, wins the People's Choice Award at the Toronto International Film Festival.
Queen Victoria's favourite Tuscan villa for sale for more than US$55 million
Once a favoured holiday destination for Queen Victoria, and reputedly described in one of the greatest works of Italian literature, the Villa Palmieri is steeped in history and could now be yours – if you have more than €50 million (US$55 million) lying around.
Air Canada deal avoids shutdown, brings relief to passengers and business groups
Travellers, business groups and politicians expressed fervent relief on Sunday after Air Canada and the union representing thousands of its pilots negotiated a new labour deal and averted a disruptive, countrywide shutdown.
U.S. says claims of CIA plot to kill Maduro are 'categorically false' after Venezuela arrests six foreigners
The U.S. State Department has rejected claims of CIA involvement in an alleged plot to kill Venezuela's leader Nicolas Maduro, after Venezuelan authorities said they had arrested six foreigners, including a U.S. Navy SEAL.
What are your rights as a neighbour in Canada?
If you have beef with your neighbour and you feel it's gone too far, what should you do? A personal injury lawyer has some advice.