Iordelzms . ' -, _ . P .. . o ? g . 333$ sk', 'cr", l _' T, s'" . .."' O l on - li Since 1978 Alexander Futon Manhattan Futon 'rtardirVmrE-rtmte', (fl Sen-mg your 'i'")riT"i"'j"'iiiiijNIcII 886-2850 Ambassador Bed Milan Double Bed Since 1978 "CANA0A'S MATTRESS SUPERSTORE" Now, more than eGitr/we're Water1oo's newspaper'. 1lrtt%rrtuttcturrrtheunrtmtsithethttnotcanadiartund"ortkBta. Mun-Wed 10-6pm Ttursh,. ID-Bpm Saturday Hipm Sunday 11-5pm afllll, (Ili! Crew Duane: A‘ I TWIN (t MA 7785535 _ from IRE" S79 Judge selected for RIM Park inquiry ta,ntiGed from page I sub-lease agreements tor the recreation facility A settlement was reached earlier this year, which reduced the city's payments by more than $82 million over the term of the agreement; and brought the facility's controversial price tag of $227 million down to $145 million. Continued from page I David Bauer Drive, adjacent to the Waterloo Memorial Recre- ation Complex. at a projected cost of $8.6 million, Library expansion plan, not dead The city has also applied for provincial Superbuild funding. which could shave about $2 million off the price. The board has remained firm expansion on the main library's current Albert-Street site would not be practical. and would likely cost taxpay- ers more in the long run Chief librarian Joanne Tate, seemingly surprised by the city's position, reminded. two studies, conducted by theWai- ter Fedy Partnership and Ver- meulens cost consulting com- pany have looked at the feasi- bility of expansion on the existing site, and both deter- mined expansion wouldn't meet the library's current or future needs. J "t Sen ed 7 days 5:00-1 l:00rm baud within The Best Wann- I'mcnld Inn 106 Laden St. Gudph ("PWNW the train sMtiom a an mun-an 'hh5t9-4B6-2620 I 356-152/ Inllmcl h “M .1 short derl‘ up thghmay My lmm Watcrh n 1‘ ' .lrl‘ rxp.lnd|ng In In": and luv: d limitcd numhtr of nul ol mu " nu m basins» available- We miter . :‘Iquuuq mm gnu-z. . l mu lull Mts" .1 I'm nu Huh“ 1 um I run a. n ( lu‘-II- '9 . l’wlrvn d m Inur~ " lurmlwh ee um m Mum. iridtirodhthrwrqsoltbxkirqs [ERIE] healing-ant l..l..B.0. Wes. large selection of Indian and Western dishes Seouisll Style Indian and\ European Cuisine Copies of all accounts for . J" huh» tas . _ urn In" " . hurry“: u. . v "mprvlwrr . mum! adult JiGPtt r "ff u- a! 2'tr 3m" and m- rrrtf km mu " "nub-7mm "Pit" mum tfar. wmr 11:" GOLF. up.†turn... ppm-1m Ill! [m " low a,5SE% o I. N T professional fees and dis- bursements incurred by the city in connection with the financing of RIM Park were released Last week, which showed the city spent over $1 million on the litigation process. The city predicts the inquiry will take between six months to one year to com- plete. at a cost of about $600,000, "We have a Superbuild application that's pending. and two studies by two very reputable firms have already been done," she said. "I dont know what a third opinion would do." But Dealer believes it's too eady to rule gut othy or1tiorts. "It's not that we're disput- ing the (studyhiigures," he said. "We're confident those iigsms are accurate. "But maybe there's a differ, ent type of addition to look ate other than what's been pro- posed. And our goal is to explore, evaluate. come back with that information and form an opinion. We're keep- ing the library board up to speed with our analysis. But we've always said that we wanted to hear from the pub- lic in terms of other options. and that's what we're doing." The city's open-minded approach was welcomed by many residents who attended the meeting. "The city has come quite a ways in [has meetings." com- mented John Shomeed. who favours library expansion aver relocation. "These sound like rational comparisons. "Before the (city) hires another consultant, and enters into a new process. they should get dw communi- ty to work with staff to get look at additional comparisons." "But it's also sort of a one- sided journey. There's really not an opportunity for detailed dialogue.' SLUB