Showing posts with label east wareham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label east wareham. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 20, 2016
Cranberry Highway Flooding Becoming A Chronic Problem
This picture was taken from where the old 99 Restaurant was on the Cranberry Highway in Wareham.
The town may have a bit of a problem here. This is the main road in East Wareham.
Granted, we had furious rainfall yesterday. However, this has been a long-running problem in the area.
I was driving in this area during Hurricane Irene, when 7 inches of rain fell. The flooding, which only covered a hundred yards of Cranberry Highway in yesterday's event. spilled into the Wal-Mart parking lot. I saw a people who were nearly washed away by it.
The road was impassable, and flooding was bad enough that a car was stranded and abandoned by the 7-11. I saw one guy stall out in the mess yesterday, and he had to shove his car out of the water.
I'm guessing at this, but Dick's Pond and Sand Pond may also be prone to sending their overflow into the Cranberry Highway, as the road flooding I have seen along this road over the years went down near each them.
This could be a major problem if a hurricane strikes us full-bore. This road, which is pretty far back from the sea and was flooded yesterday by rainwater, is the only way to evacuate Onset.
I have no idea how to fix stuff like this, but someone must. It seems to be a pretty major problem.
Labels:
99,
bourne,
buzzards bay,
cranberry highway,
east wareham,
Onset,
route 28,
route 6,
walmart,
Wareham
Location: Buzzards Bay, MA, USA
Wareham, MA, USA
Thursday, August 27, 2015
Wal-Mart Departure = Deathblow For East Wareham?
In this town, on this day, the Wal Mart has giveth, and taketh away.... |
Their lease in East Wareham wouldn't let them sell groceries, and the new store will be right where 28/25/6/495/195 converge. People like to beat up Wally, myself included, but you can understand their motivation here.
This is a massive change to the face of the town. East Wareham loses her Boss business, and the effects will reach far beyond the 4 walls of the store.
West Wareham, which as a backwater until recently, got Wareham Crossng in 2007. That, and this Wal-Mart, killed off 350 acres of forest. It turned a rural area into a traffic destination. There are those who say that one of the Walton heirs personally came to Wareham and stomped all of the Eastern Box Turtles on the property to death.
The Weweantic River, which feeds off the streams near Wally, is said to be less than pleased with the Walton's arrival. She may be a new channel to dump more nitrogen into Buzzards Bay, and doom what is left of our shellfishing.
The Crossing radically changed West Wareham, and the Wally will change it more.
Wally will also change East Wareham, his former home. Wally is leaving a plaza that has already lost Staples, TJ Maxx, and Friendly's... each of whom (I'm not 100% sure about the Friendly's, and Jessica is over there doing the pics as I write this) moved to the more-happening West Wareham area.
Not many businesses of any power are now on the Cranberry Highway in East Wareham. The biggest business there which isn't serving food or pouring gasoline is either Benny's or Sullivan Tire. Ooops, I almost forgot Home Depot... although I wonder how long they plan to stay there?
Can you really anchor a business district around what is left in East Wareham these days? I do wonder if the region will be able to support the Fast Food Fab Five (McDonald's, Burger King, KFC/Taco Bell, Wendy's and Subway) without both the WalMart customers and her employees. I'll be less than pleased if I have to go to Exit 6 in Plymouth to get Papa Gino's pizza, I'll tell you that much.
Fortunately, because there's a Dunkin' Donuts every 200 yards, the coffee people will be OK.
When the foodies leave, that's when you can start digging the grave. That chops the low-level jobs from the region by the dozens, Those businesses tend to anchor themselves around the big business in the area, and they won't survive picking off the few people who need to go to Benny's.
Stop n Shop now anchors the plaza that Wally used to own, with help from Radio Shack, Delken's Laundry, the Dollar Store, ProCuts and a nail joint. Throw in a few banks and some squalid motels, and that's the backbone of the business district.
This section of town is doomed... and it has been in the spiral since 1987. That was when Route 25 was expanded to the Bourne Bridge, which took all of the tourist money away. That killed the dog, although the tail was wagging until Wally hauled up stakes for the other side of the tracks. Expect no help from the government. Our fair Gateway has been the neglected stepchild of Cape Cod for decades.
The bad part is that, on the surface, this looks like a positive. Wareham just shifted their Wally a few miles down the road, so only the poorest motel-living people will lose access to Wally's Asian-crafted goodies. Rather than killing jobs, the move up to Super status created 85 paying gigs for people in a pretty poor town. Traffic congestion is East Wareham should be lightened considerably.
The worst part is when you think about it deeper than that. There is no silver lining... that's just how the edge of the blade looks when your section of town is on the chopping block.
I have a few ideas as to what to do with the old Wally building, but that will be for a future article. I still need to find an Asian kid to pose for my Jade/Helm occupying UN/Chinese soldier photos.
In the meantime, I look at East Wareham and just shudder. There's a bad moon on the rise.
Labels:
cranberry highway,
east wareham,
ghost town,
Onset,
wal mart,
Wareham,
wareham crossing,
west wareham
Location: Buzzards Bay, MA, USA
Wareham, MA, USA
Wednesday, August 26, 2015
West Wareham Wal Mart Opens Today
I doubt that Jessica was aiming for irony with her camera, but she found some. |
The West Wareham Wal Mart Supercenter opened today. It replaced the Wal-Mart in East Wareham.
The big difference is that this is a Super Wal-Mart, which means that they have a supermarket.
As you can see, no expenses were spared to welcome the shoppers to the new Wally.
There are some pros and cons. It's not a 24 hour Wally, which is bad news for journalists who might be nocturnal. They have the same Subway franchise as the other Wally did, with the same people running it. There isn't a bank in it.
They do have a nice grocery section, and it's a brand new building. The grocery section is bigger than the old Wareham location, but not as big as the one n Plymouth. You can drop right off 195 or 25 onto it.
There aren't any bells and whistles, it's a Wal-Mart. You'd like to think that new ones would be spectacular, but they pretty much have about 5-20 blueprints they break out depending on how big the town is, or how close to the highway the store is.
Nothing against my girl Red, however... she's puttin' in work.
Nothing says "Patriot" like a 100% Made In China tailgate zone. Winner of the 2015 "Most Ominous Use Of Scarecrows" award at Cannes. |
Wally was giving out some free stuff, and they had vendors all over the place. Do note the Wareham school colors on that cupcake, homie! |
If you hug it, it gives you a free drink. When I dry-humped it, it had the nerve to give me a Coke Zero. It'll be amazed when I don't call, too... |
"Rotting meat on stale bread, prepared by savages"... Jim Norton, on Subway |
All this and more awaits you at the West Wareham Super Walmart Supercenter! |
Labels:
attention wal mart shoppers,
east wareham,
gentrification,
Onset,
urban deay,
wal mart,
wal-mart,
walmart,
walmart supercenter,
Wareham,
west wareham
Location: Buzzards Bay, MA, USA
West Wareham, Wareham, MA, USA
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