Neighbors oppose Willow Bend parking plan tied to state grant, ask council for more public input

5821804 · September 15, 2025

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Summary

Residents near Willow Bend told council they oppose a planned 40-space concrete parking lot for boat trailers and urged the city to use alternate sites and preserve open lakefront green space; councilmembers said the matter will be placed on a future agenda for further review.

Residents of the Willow Bend area pressed the Rockwall City Council during open forum Sept. 15 to reconsider a grant-funded plan that would build roughly 40 trailer parking spaces at the Willow Bend lakefront site, arguing the proposal would replace one of the neighborhood’s last public lakeshore green spaces.

Why it matters: The project is funded in part by a state grant that reportedly requires the park to remain open 24/7, 365 days a year if the money is accepted. Neighbors said that condition made the proposed plan irreversible and would increase traffic on a single-lane neighborhood road they call unsafe for pedestrians and emergency access.

Residents’ concerns Several speakers from the Willow Bend area — including Kevin Folsom, Stephanie Folsom and Lindsey Orianna — said the parking plan would add substantial boat-trailer traffic to Willow Bend Road, a single-lane route used daily by residents, walkers, children and an elderly neighbor who uses a motorized wheelchair. “How are we gonna widen the road when we start having those problems? Has that been thought through far enough down the road?” Kevin Folsom asked the council.

Neighbors also said the lakefront is used daily by families, dog walkers and others, and that the 40-space design seemed out of scale with actual usage. “Twice a year, maybe three times a year we have maybe five, maybe at the most 10 trailers come and park in that green space,” Stephanie Folsom said. “We don't need 40 parking spaces.”

Alternatives and city response Speakers urged the council to consider alternative sites — including a 49,000-square-foot lot adjacent to an existing parking area — and to dedicate some grant money to family-friendly amenities such as playground equipment rather than paving more lakefront.

Mayor Tim McCallum and staff acknowledged the grant’s restrictions and said staff and the council will put the item on a future agenda for formal consideration; Councilwoman Jeffress had asked city staff to place the topic on a forthcoming agenda.

Next steps Councilmembers and staff said they will work through the city’s process to schedule the item for formal review, allowing for more public input, and staff flagged that the project’s grant conditions and required 24/7 access are constraints but not necessarily insurmountable. Residents requested a hearing or workshop dedicated to alternatives and modifications to the current plan.

Ending The council did not take action the night residents appealed; it will address the item at a later meeting after staff follow-up and additional public input.