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Twotownhousestobebuiltinparkingspots

Complex will be left with five parking spots for visitors

DIANE STRANDBERG dstrandberg@tricitynews.com

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Parking problems on a busy neighbourhood street in Port Coqutilam won’t be worsened with two new townhouses, council has decided

After one of its longest discussions in recent history, a majority of councillors didn’t agree with a staff recommendation to decline permits for two more townhouse units in an older complex at 1260 Riverside Dr

The developer, Pollyco Group of Companies, wants to build two 2,000 sq ft townhouses on a portion of land used for a play area and remove three parking spaces, leaving five at a 20-year-old townhouse complex

The discussion took place Tuesday (Feb 28) during a council meeting; Mayor Brad West and Coun Nancy McCurrach were absent from the meeting with Coun Steve Darling as acting mayor Coun Dean Washington said parking concerns in the area could be better addressed by ticketing parking scofflaws instead of preventing the developer from adding the two units

“For me, it’s an en- forcement issue Two or three more cars is going to make not one lick of difference at that corner,” said Washington, who opposed the staff recommendation, along with councillors Paige Petriw and Glenn Pollock

Both Petriw and Pollock said they struggled with their decision, but in the end they thought the city needs the two extra townhomes

“I think the two new units are beneficial to the community; they are good sized family units [and] they have a lot of parking,” said Petriw Pollock added the city needs more housing, and needs it “fast”

“Hearing the comments from the people that live there, eliminating three spots, it isn’t really eliminating visitor parking It’s eliminating parking for their whole strata,” he said

“I want to see the housing so badly that I’m thinking about biting the bullet here so we’ll see”

Dominic Long, PoCo’s director of community safety and corporate services, said parking on nearby Yangtze Gate has long been a problem

There have been multiple complaints from residents in the area, which is one of the main reasons staff opposed the addition of two townhomes on three visitor’s spaces

Most of the complaints are directed toward those “not using their garages and driveways [for vehicles] and also having trailers or bikes etc , ” Long said

The city also received three letters of complaint from residents about the townhouse proposal; one wrote parking in the area is a “nightmare”

Darling agreed with staff that the parking variance and development permit sought by the developer should be declined

Citing the developers’ own traffic study, he said drivers who can’t find spaces on Yangtze Gate will end up parking on Riverside Drive, next to the busy park and Terry Fox Secondary School

He agreed that more enforcement is needed but said eliminating some visitors’ parking would add to the problem

“We need to do more work around here to make it safer,” added Darling

He described hearing complaints from residents about traffic along Riverside Drive, which has poor sight lines due to a curve, is full of kids, as well as vehicles speeding to and from Costco

The developer, meanwhile, has done “everything it could” to find alternatives, said Pollyco spokesperson Steve Yang

“We’re hoping that by this variance being approved then no-one would have have a visitor parking stall in front of their residence,” Yang said

He added the possibility of two additonal townhomes being built has been a part of every resident’s purchase agreement since the complex was originally constructed

Two residents also spoke at the public input opportunity and said they were in favour of the project even though it would remove some visitors’ parking

They said the stalls were being used by residents, which is not enforced by the strata

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