Published: Friday, January 17, 2014

New construction harming existing Everett businesses

By Noah Haglund Herald Writer

EVERETT They welcomed the arrival of new neighbors to a traditionally industrial patch of downtown.

But road tie-ups from construction of a hotel and farmers market going up between Grand Avenue and West Marine View Drive have hurt nearby businesses.

A boat-repair shop in September sued the developer over access to a public alley. Two other neighbors a hydraulics business and suspension shop on Grand Avenue have seen walk-in business dry up with repeated road closures.

They also fault the city for doing a poor job coordinating the work.

"We need the alley to get the boats in and out," said Tim Caudill, owner of Cascade Marine Service. "My major frustration was that I couldn't get the city to do anything to verify what was going on with the alley."

Everett spokeswoman Meghan Pembroke said public works officials tried to balance the needs of the development and existing businesses.

Among other measures, the city required the developer to coordinate construction with neighbors. That was an explicit requirement of lane-closure permits.

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New construction harming existing Everett businesses

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