Politics & Government

City Council Votes to Draft Law to Keep Retail Chains From Chinatown

The new ordinance wouldn't apply to the Wal-Mart grocery store planned for the corner of Cesar Chavez and Grand avenues. The City approved the permit for that store late Thursday.

The Los Angeles City Council voted unanimously Friday to draft a
law that could effectively ban major retail chains from opening in Chinatown.

It would not block a controversial Wal-Mart grocery store in an existing building permitted  late Thursday.

The 13-0 vote directed the Planning Department and the City Attorney's Office to draft a temporary ordinance to block so-called formula retail stores--stores with standardized facades, decor, signage or trademark.

The ordinance was modified just before the vote to apply only to businesses larger than 20,000 square feet.

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The motion, introduced by Council District 1's Ed Reyes, had been viewed as a moved to stop Walmart from opening a 33,000 square-foot scaled-down "neighborhood market" in a building with senior citizen apartments on the northwest corner of Cesar Chavez and Grand avenues.

The building is located about a mile from downtown Echo Park.   
But the Department of Building and Safety had issued its final tenant improvement permit on 4:30 p.m. Thursday, shielding the store from ordinance.

Find out what's happening in Echo Park-Silver Lakewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Councilmember Reyes, who represents Chinatown, said it was "my intent to protect the character of Chinatown."

Opponents of the ordinance, including the LA Chamber of Commerce, say it will discourage businesses that want to move to the city.

Groups on both side of the issue held rallies Thursday and Friday before the vote.

Once it is drafted, the ordinance will need the approval of the Planning
Commission and the full City Council.

According to the Los Angeles Times, Reyes' motion, which also was signed by Councilmember Eric Garcetti, bypassed  the committee that usually vets such ordinances, preventing it from receiving a public hearing.

Related Coverage:

L.A. Council Proposal Could Keep Wal-Mart Out of Chinatown (LA Times)

Wal-Mart Permitted to Build in L.A.'s Chinatown (Sacramento Bee)


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