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Vancouver Aquarium expansion plan decision deferred
The public consultation on Vancouver Aquarium's plans to expand their facilities and introduce further dolphins and whales has been unanimously deferred by the Vancouver Parks Board until September. Board members also voted to include a review of the city's bylaw on marine mammals in the technical review.
Park board delays public consultation on aquarium upgrade plans
Emily Chung and Nicholas Read, Vancouver Sun
Published: Tuesday, July 11, 2006
VANCOUVER - Public consultation on a proposed Vancouver Aquarium expansion
in Stanley Park will not be held until September, if it happens at all, the
Vancouver park board decided Monday.
Board members voted unanimously to put off until the Sept. 11 park board
meeting a decision on whether to endorse a public consultation process,
which would include open houses, a telephone survey and public meetings. The
delay will mean a technical review of the proposal can be completed and made
public before the consultation takes place.
Board members also voted to include a review of the city's bylaw on marine
mammals in the technical review.
Park board staff had recommended that the board vote Monday night on the
consultation process so it could begin in August. But Park commissioner Allan De Genova suggested postponing the vote, as many
people are on vacation during the summer. He also said the public needs to have the facts from the technical review in
order for the consultation to be meaningful.
The technical review will cover topics such as the land required by
expansion and the impact the expansion will have on trees, traffic,
pedestrian pathways and access to the free public viewing area.
The aquarium wants to renovate aging parts of its facility, build larger
pools for beluga whales, Steller sea lions and dolphins and upgrade the
public plaza at the entrance. Cost estimates range from $60 million to $70
million.
©The Vancouver Sun 2006
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