*Farmers **Return to Halt Industrialization of the South Central Farm*


 SOUTH CENTRAL FARMERS
Contact: Tezozomoc 818 527-6384
For immediate release

 Time: Wednesday, June 5, 9:30 am

Location: Los Angeles City Hall, Room 1020, 200 N. Spring St., Los Angeles,
CA 90012


 On Wednesday, June 5, the South Central Farmers will face off once more
with the Los Angeles Planning Commission. The Planning Commission will be
considering a proposal to cover 11 acres of the 13-acre farmland with
industrial buildings, and put 400 parking spaces on the remaining land.


 The proposal comes from C.E.G. Construction. Seagal & Rea are the
architects.


 The Farmers are organizing to stop the plans to cover the empty lots that
buttress the low-income Central Alameda neighborhood from the Alameda
Corridor industrial and transportation zone with four massive industrial
buildings. With their call to Save the Farm, the Farmers and their
supporters will demand environmental justice for area residents, who have
fought off everything from putting an incinerator to a sweatshop on the
site over two decades. An industrial manufacturing site on the land
threatens the working class neighborhood with hundreds of truck trips and
commuters daily. Most of the jobs will be transferred from existing
manufacturing facilities, and will be low-skilled and low-wage.


 The story of the South Central Farm has entered the annals of Angelenos'
battle for green space, alongside the Cornfields, Chavez Ravine, Taylor
Yard, and the Ballona Wetlands, except that the Farmers have halted
development on the land for seven years. Mayor Tom Bradley gave the land to
the community in 1993, in the wake of the Los Angeles Uprising. But five
years later, the City was in negotiations with developer Ralph Horowitz to
industrialize this largest parcel of undeveloped land in Los Angeles.


 In 2006, the 350 families who comprised the South Central Farmers became
an international symbol of the struggle between the people's right to raise
and distribute healthy food for their families and neighbors, and the
profits of developers in the over-industrialized food desert of South Los
Angeles. Thousands of Farm supporters from across the country joined
celebrities like Julia Butterfly Hill, John Quigley, Daryl Hannah, Joan
Baez, Willie Nelson, Ralph Nader, and Danny Glover to protest the City's
sale of the Farm for development. Letters of support poured in from as far
away as Oaxaca and South Africa.


 But in the early morning of June 13, 2006, after a 3-month encampment on
the Farm, the sheriff's deputies in SWAT gear and bulldozers arrived and
razed two generations of work to reclaim and farm the land. Thousands of
people poured into the low-income neighborhood and clutched the chain link
fence around the Farm or wept from across the street. They witnessed the
sheriff’s storm across the carefully crafted rows of herbs, cactus, and
vegetables. The City forcibly removed protestors who had camped on the land
and clung to platforms in tree branches in defiance of an eviction order.
Forty-four were arrested. Television cameras from around the country
recorded the destruction of nearly twenty years of family farming, and on
the noonday news, millions watched as fire trucks uprooting trees and
rolled across plots cultivated by parents and their children.


 Since that tragic morning when the nation's largest urban farm was
uprooted, the Farmers have halted development on the farmland, turning back
plans to sell the land to clothing giant Forever 21 for a manufacturing
sweatshop with the threat of a national boycott. Alarmed residents and the
South Central Farmers Support Committee collected thousands of signatures,
packed a Planning Department meeting to overflowing, and testified for
hours in opposition to the proposed development.  The Planning Commission
reluctantly reversed itself, requiring an Environmental Impact Report
before construction for the shipping center could begin. That project was
shelved. The Farmers returned in 2011 to protest the City's plan to sell
off a 2.7-acre parcel that had been promised as a park for area children to
a conglomerate of small clothing manufacturers. The Farm remains an
international icon of low-income residents creating their own environmental
justice.



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