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'This is a turning point'; Commercial development may change Muskego's rural character
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Muskego -- Earl Duewel has lived on Glenbrook Drive since 1959.
He's seen Muskego grow and change, and his kids even went to
school with the kids who lived on the farm where the Kohl's
department store now sits.
"When we first came out here, we knew about Muskego -- it had
lakes, the closest lakes around," Duewel said.
Now, his subdivision sits behind the planned site of a 24-hour
Wal-Mart Supercenter. It's one change to the Moorland Road corridor
Duewel said he's not look...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Tesco war launched
Bath Chronicle, The
; A campaign has been launched to safeguard small shops in Bath as supermarket giant Tesco eyes a key site in the city. Residents, traders and politicians have united in an effort to protect independent stores in Moorland Road from the effects of development at the former Bath Press site in Lower
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Traders' champion is sad to step down after 17 successful years
Bath Chronicle, The
; A Bath businessman is stepping down after 17 years as leader of one of the city's best-known groups of traders. Barry Cruse has been the driving force behind the Moorland Road Traders' Association, which is now known as the Moorland Road Association, since helping to found the group in 1991. But
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Sod-farm use develops into grass-roots issue in Ham Lake; The northern suburb is split on the right approach for retaining the community's rural character.(NEWS)
Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN)
; Byline: PAUL LEVY; STAFF WRITER The Ham Lake City Council has drawn a line in the sod. On one side is the mayor, who says it's time to let landowners develop sod fields without city restrictions that call for a minimum of one acre of land for each house. Instead of spreading 40 houses over 40
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News brief - Residents invited to help define rural character; Residents invited to help define rural character
Concord Monitor
; DEERING - Residents are invited to come to town hall tonight and tomorrow to help the planning board define rural character and determine how to preserve it. With the help of 16 master's degree students taking a summer urban planning course at the University of New Hampshire, residents will discuss
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Moorland road should have nothing to fear
Bath Chronicle, The
; It is difficult to imagine a more unnecessary campaign than 'The Save Moorland Road Traders from Tesco' crusade. I suggest readers compare the group in the photograph on the front page of the Chronicle, May 29, with the one taken outside of the Belvoir Castle public house featured on the April 17
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