H-E-B Coming to Wimberley in 2017
For tension, it put the Super Bowl to shame.
It took 4 hours
and 40 minutes, but after a couple of confused false-starts, a detailed
H-E-B presentation, 51 personal testimonials, two bathroom breaks, five
soul-baring speeches from City Council members, a last-minute
desperation H-E-B pledge to build in just three years and two
excruciatingly protracted votes, Wimberley said yes to the major new
store Thursday night.
It was a day to be
proud of the great passion and civic interest of Wimberley. The city
turned out big to stand up for what it thought was best for Wimberley's
future. CARD applauds everyone who came; it's a night we will all long
remember.
"This is the
largest crowd we've ever had anywhere," said a very relieved H-E-B team
leader Ben Scott shortly after the final vote. Most of the large H-E-B
team that met with CARD on Jan. 6 was in attendance, sitting at the
front of the auditorium.
An estimated
500-600 people were in attendance. Citizens who arrived more than a few
minutes late for the 6 p.m. City Council meeting, held at Wimberley
Community Center to accommodate the expected crowd, had to park two
blocks away in the town square; the Community Center and Brookshire
Brothers parking lots were already full. Some people left because they
could not get close enough to the doors to hear. More than 100 stood
along the auditorium walls, while many more stood in the lobby.
photo by T. M. Raines
By the end,
perhaps 300 tired and emotionally rung-out citizens were still on hand.
The first vote, a move to deny the store's request, tied when Council
Member Tom Talcott abstained. Council Members Matt Meeks and John White
voted no to the motion (meaning they were for H-E-B) while Mac
McCullough and Steve Thurber voted yes, against the store.
Mayor Bob Flocke was not on hand to break the tie; he had left early, citing health reasons.
A second vote,
this one to allow the store's proposal, finally settled the question
when McCullough and Talcott joined Meeks and White, leaving Thurber the
lone hold-out.
There were many
passionate folks on both sides of the issue, but the pro-H-E-B faction
clearly had more attendees, more preparation and more speakers. In all,
10 citizens spoke against H-E-B, 38 spoke for it and 3 spoke about
related issues without taking a side. Almost everyone, for or against
the store's proposal, spoke positively about H-E-B as a business. The
major themes of speakers for the H-E-B proposal were supporting WISD
(which was selling the property), the good neighbor policies of the
store, lower prices and keeping Wimberley money local. Those opposed to
the proposal hit primarily on the location and large size of the store
as inappropriate, the hurried approval process and maintaining the small
town charm of Wimberley.
Probably no one in
the room could doubt the complete sincerity and inner-struggle Council
Members had as they tried to reach the right decision right under the
eyes of their fellow citizens.
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