City Extends Drive-Through Restaurant Ban
- Share via
It will be at least another year before any new drive-through fast-food restaurants and takeout eateries open in South Pasadena.
The City Council late Wednesday extended a moratorium for 12 months on everything from mom-and-pop hamburger joints to franchise restaurants.
Citing fears that fast-food outlets erode the character of the small town and escalate traffic problems along its main corridors, the council unanimously renewed the nearly year-old moratorium. The vote means a McDonald’s built more than decade ago remains the sole drive-through restaurant in town.
Officials said the city of 24,000 people will soon consider joining Sierra Madre and West Hollywood in outlawing any new drive-through restaurants.
Mayor Dorothy Cohen said she likes Sierra Madre’s recent ban.
“I’m against fast-food drive-through establishments, period,” Cohen said.
She said such a ban strikes a chord in the community, where preservation and development go hand in hand.
Cohen said she expects her position to be supported by the council. The present moratorium on new fast-food restaurants came on the heels of a decision by the majority of the five-member council to put a lid on plans for a drive-through Jack in the Box.
In supporting that vote last year, Councilman Dick Richards said that adding fast-food restaurants along Fair Oaks Avenue could conflict with the city’s plans to use that road as a street-based alternative to the proposed Long Beach Freeway extension. For more than 30 years, residents have fought the highway that would cut through the city.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.