Why I wrote "Still Economics on the Brain" last night

Several quotes of note here:

They noted that the company paid signature gatherers for the ballot initiative more than it pays its average clerk.

and

The attorney general's letter to the Inglewood City Council states that while the initiative process may be used to adopt land-use and planning measures, the ballot cannot be used to usurp powers granted to elected bodies, like issuing building permits. The attorney general also said the initiative might be in conflict with state laws governing subdivisions and the environment.

and

The only city official vocally supporting the project is the mayor, Roosevelt F. Dorn. He said the complex would bring more than 1,000 new permanent jobs, add $3 million to $5 million a year to the distressed city's tax base and provide a revenue stream to finance as much as $100 million in new bonds. "We're talking about a new police station, a new community and cultural center, a new park in District 4, upgrades for every park and recreation area in Inglewood," Mr. Dorn said. "As far as I'm concerned, it's a no-brainer."

and

David Karjanen, research coordinator at the Center on Policy Initiatives, a nonprofit group in San Diego that studies the impact of development on low- and moderate-income families, said he had studied Wal-Mart's efforts to win approval for projects across the nation and found the Inglewood case to be unique in the breadth of the exemption it would win from local land-use planning.

"If this succeeds in Inglewood, it will set a precedent and send a message to developers who have an unpalatable project," Dr. Karjanen said. "It will open the door for others, not just Wal-Mart, and we can expect to see this happen across California and elsewhere."



Stymied by Politicians, Wal-Mart Turns to Voters
By JOHN M. BRODER

INGLEWOOD, Calif., April 2 — As Wal-Mart continues its march across the American landscape, this Los Angeles suburb of 112,000 people is the latest testing ground for the company's exercise of political and marketing muscle.

Inglewood voters go to the polls on Tuesday to decide whether to turn over 60 acres of barren concrete adjacent to the Hollywood Park racetrack to Wal-Mart to create a megastore and a collection of chain shops and restaurants.

The ballot initiative is sponsored by Wal-Mart, which collected more than 10,000 signatures to put the question to voters after the Inglewood City Council blocked the proposed development last year, citing environmental, traffic, labor, public safety and economic concerns.

While Wal-Mart has turned to the ballot in a number of cities and towns to win the right to build its giant emporiums, the Inglewood initiative is significantly different. The proposal would essentially exempt Wal-Mart from all of Inglewood's planning, zoning and environmental regulations, creating a city-within-a-city subject only to its own rules. Wal-Mart has hired an advertising and public relations firm to market the initiative and is spending more than $1 million to support the measure, known as initiative 04-A.

The company is blanketing the community, which is roughly half African-American and half Latino, with mailers and telephone calls and is broadcasting advertisements on television stations with black and Latino audiences.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on April 5, 2004 - 7:31am :: News