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Chinatown Walmart: Why Labor is Suing LA

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OUT OF THE PAN - The Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance (APALA) and United Food and Commercial Workers Local 770 has filed a lawsuit challenging the City of Los Angeles’ handling of Walmart’s controversial Chinatown store project.


The suit alleges that the LA City Department of Building and Safety failed to notify the public of its decision to issue a Notice of Exemption (NOE), which allows Walmart to move forward on its Chinatown project without environmental review. The lawsuit also asks a judge to stop construction at the store.

The plaintiffs in the lawsuit are asking a judge to find the exemption invalid and require that a new one be issued. Because the building permits are being appealed – an initial hearing is expected in August – the lawsuit argues that the exemption should not have been issued until the appeal process was exhausted.

The notice to the public of the exemption is intended to prevent the appearance of backroom deals. Failure by the City to provide this notice – even after the deadline had passed – has raised questions about the level of transparency within City Hall and heightened concerns about whether Walmart is receiving special treatment.

The Department of Building and Safety first provoked criticism by issuing building permits to the Arkansas-based Corporation less than 24 hours before unanimous City Council approval of an emergency ordinance limiting chain store development in Chinatown.

(Aiha Nguyen is a LAANE Senior Research/Policy Analyst. She first joined LAANE as an intern while completing her master's degree in urban planning at UCLA. This report was posted first at fryingpannews.org)
-cw

Tags: Walmart, unions, labor, lawsuit, Walmart lawsuit, labor sues city, City Council, Chinatown, Chinatown Walmart, City Hall, Building and Safety









CityWatch
Vol 10 Issue 55
Pub: July 10, 2012


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