Semi-rural property owner wants Winnipeg to banish big rig from neighbour's driveway - Action News
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Manitoba

Semi-rural property owner wants Winnipeg to banish big rig from neighbour's driveway

A resident of a semi-rural neighbourhood in southeastern Winnipeg wants city hall to revoke a truck-driving neighbour's right to park a semi-trailer tractor in the driveway of a 3,000-square-foot home.

City approved plan to park semi-trailer tractor at property north of the Red River Floodway

A resident of Four Mile Road doesn't want the owner of this 3,000-square-foot St. Anne's Road home to have the right to park a semi-trailer tractor. (Google Street View)

A resident of a semi-rural neighbourhood in southeastern Winnipegwants city hall to revoke a truck-driving neighbour'sright to park a semi-trailer tractor in the driveway of a 3,000-square-foot home.

Earlier this month, Winnipeg's planning department granted the owner of a one-hectare (or roughly 2.5-acre)property near the southend of St. Anne's Road the right to park his rig at his residential property when he's in the city.

According to city rules, city planners have to sign off on any request to park a heavy truck on a residential property.

The planning departmentagreed to allow thistruck to sit on a residential driveway becausethe vehicle is supposed to be on the road nine out of 10 days, the property owner to the north runs a dog-kennel business on site, and all the truck driver's immediate neighbours have signed letters of support.

"The rural setting of the subject site at the end of a regional street, two lots north of the floodway, is as likely a location for approval for this particular use," planners write in a decision approved by planning director John Kiernan on Oct. 3.

"The truck parking would be occasional and with very few homes in the immediate vicinity should not create an adverse effect."

A neighbour several homes awayon Four Mile Road, however, appealed this decision on the basis "semi-trailers on the gravel cause damage to the road" and are noisy, according to an appeal filed with the city.

Winnipeg's appeal committee will consider the request to banish the semi-trailer tractor on Thursday morning.