City speakers described a plan to develop a vacant city-owned lot at 94th and Broadway in South Los Angeles into approximately 180 housing units and a full-service grocery store to serve the neighborhood. Presenters said constituents have cited limited healthy food options as a major challenge and framed the project as both a housing and food-access intervention.
Officials disclosed that environmental cleanup is a prerequisite: testing identified contaminated soil at the site. The city's Economic and Workforce Development department, Council District 8 staff and Sanitation are preparing a federal Environmental Protection Agency grant application seeking $2,000,000 to remediate the soil so development can move forward. Presenters said part of the EPA application process includes holding a community workshop to inform residents about contamination and the planned remediation.
Council President Marquise Harris Dawson and staff emphasized interest in identifying additional city funds if necessary, described the project as a positive economic benefit for the community, and urged resident involvement in forthcoming workshops and updates.
No formal approval, contract award, or timetable for construction was presented during the session; presenters described the workshop and EPA application as steps in a longer process.