In recent months the Los Angeles City Council has prohibited silly
string, for one day of the year, in one community only, and it has adopted
brave new laws requiring grocery stores to keep better track of their
shopping carts. Members have pondered banning smoking at beaches and
have opened negotiations on the use of land hundreds of miles away in
the Owens Valley - before learning that they have no authority to do
any such thing.
Such initiatives may provoke a chuckle or two and may even prove to
be in the best interest of city residents after the laughter dies down.
But they hardly constitute the kind of progressive reforms expected
in some quarters after last year's elections bolstered the council's
liberal core.
With Eric Garcetti and Ed Reyes already leading the way on several
key projects, and with strong backing from council President Alex Padilla,
the council's progressive agenda was supposed to take off with the addition,
in July 2003, of Antonio Villaraigosa and Martin Ludlow. First on the
books was to be a ban on big-box stores selling groceries, followed
by inclusionary zoning to guarantee more housing for middle-income and
low-wage residents, and community-impact reports to let neighbors know
what proposed developments would do to local paychecks, job movement,
traffic patterns and home prices. Next up would be sweeping environmental
initiatives, labor policies and police reforms.
What happened? Starting with the big-box ban - which would have prohibited
Wal-Mart Supercenters and similar grocery-selling, wage-lowering discount
mammoths - did the council chicken out?
Members this week passed a modified big-box ordinance that discards
the proposed ban and shrinks the area subject to the law from the entire
city, as lawmakers once contemplated, to only designated economic-development
areas.
Wal-Mart has bullied one city after another into backing down on bans
against its Supercenters, which it began opening in California this
year. When cities have moved ahead with tough restrictions, the company
has been quick to counterpunch with lawsuits or ballot measures.
That, at first glance, appeared to be what was at work in Los Angeles.
Wal-Mart spokesman Peter Kanelos told a joint committee chaired by Garcetti
and Reyes earlier this month that their new ordinance, while faulty,
was "not as bad" as the total ban they put together before.
That's practically code for "we beat you into submission."
But it could well be that instead of beating a hasty tactical retreat,
Garcetti and Reyes - in mulling and refining the ordinance for months
and in finally eliminating the outright ban in favor of community input
- actually made an astounding strategic advance. Wal-Mart watchers around
the nation are now looking closely to see whether Los Angeles will strike
the first successful blow against the world's largest corporation since
the Battle for Inglewood in April.
The law, which goes to a final council vote next week, requires the
developer of any superstore eyeing sites in L.A. to show what effect
projects would have on prospective new neighbors (a second council vote
is needed before the measure proceeds to Mayor Jim Hahn for signature).
With economic, pollution and traffic data compiled and presented by
analysts hired at the superstore's expense, and with small businesses
and living-wage activists on notice, local officials will now be able
to give the final thumbs-up (or -down) to any mammoth store on a case-by-case
basis.
Any retailer proposing 100,000 square feet or more of sales-floor space,
with at least 10 percent of it devoted to the sale of non-taxable goods
(groceries and prescription drugs), would be subject to the ordinance.
That takes in pretty much any Wal-Mart Supercenter, which usually measures
around 200,000 square feet and is the primary target of unionized grocery
workers at traditional supermarkets.
Restricting the laws to economic-assistance zones is not as limiting
as it might seem. Once redevelopment areas and several types of empowerment
zones are accounted for, the only places left over are communities like
Pacific Palisades, Brentwood and Woodland Hills that, frankly, are stocked
with enough wealthy and influential homeowners that there's no way they
would get a superstore unless they demanded one.
City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo was prepared to go to the mat defending
a comprehensive citywide ban, and backers of the more sweeping measure
actually looked forward to a court challenge because Delgadillo's people
said they could win.
But they could also lose. The more limited ordinance has a better chance
of emerging victorious not just at trial, but at the crucial pretrial
stages where costs are weighed and compromises are brokered. The more
airtight the ordinance is, the less likely the city would be to back
down in settlement negotiations with a big-business plaintiff.
And then there is the ballot process, which Wal-Mart has used to roll
back government-imposed restrictions in a host of communities up and
down the state. A sweeping superstore ban would almost certainly end
up on a future ballot as a referendum, where voters would have to vote
"yes" if they want to keep it in effect. Getting people to
vote "yes" on a ballot measure is always harder than getting
them to vote "no," as Inglewood voters did when they blocked
Wal-Mart's plan to bust through a host of planning and environmental
laws. Under the new law, though, it is the big-box company that will
have to ask community members to say "yes" to any given development.
And they will have to back up their request with data.
Is there any chance that a Wal-Mart Supercenter could survive the community-impact
process? Sure, there's a chance, somewhere between slim and none. And
that represents another strategic advance for progressives: Any superstore
that still wants to come to town would have to change its ways. It would
have to market its project to the neighborhood, offering not just jobs
but other community benefits to balance out the burden it would place
on traffic and the downward pressure it might exert on wages. A store
would be compelled to engage the community in discussion and, in effect,
become a responsible neighbor.
That's the hope, at least, of the Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy
(LAANE), the group that brought Los Angeles the living wage and took
the lead role in organizing the successful Inglewood campaign in April.
"These changes were our suggestions," LAANE's Roxana Tynan
said. "It's based on what we learned in Inglewood."
Which brings us back to the Community Impact Report (CIR), the LAANE-sponsored
plan to require developers of all major projects in Los Angeles to submit
an economic and environmental analysis to community review before being
allowed to move forward. The CIR went earlier this year to the City
Council and the Community Redevelopment Agency, but both bodies waited
to see what the other would do. In the end, there was too much opposition
from business and development interests, so the CIR was put on hold
while the superstore plan was hammered out.
And here now is a superstore ordinance that includes in its new smarter
form a template for community input on development projects. The CIR
has its foot in the door in the big-box law and will get an opportunity
to prove itself and, its backers hope, calm any fears that it will dry
up development.
In fact, neither the superstore law nor the CIR is essentially new
in Los Angeles. The city's general plan already couches land-use questions
in terms of the quality of life. The superstore ordinance is also a
land-use law but is aimed more specifically at economic impact.
There is still room to argue over whether the final say on development
in the city will belong to neighborhoods or to LAANE and labor. But
to Garcetti, Reyes and their council allies, the ordinance is a step
in the right direction. The next move, after Labor Day, is inclusionary
zoning - a year late, perhaps, but right on time.