Watch CBS News

LA Film School, Farmers' Market Clash Over Hollywood Permit

HOLLYWOOD (CBS) — "Save the Hollywood Farmers' Market" T-shirts will be handed out on Sunday at what may be the last — or one of the last — times the outdoor market is set up in that neighborhood.

L.A. Film School Tries To Block Hollywood Farmers' Market Over Parking Issues

Podcast

The organizers of the street market at Ivar and Selma avenues, between Hollywood and Sunset boulevards, Sustainable Economic Enterprises of Los Angeles, which oversees eight of the markets in the Los Angeles area, are in a dispute with the L.A. Film School, which claims vendors are blocking access to a school parking lot on Sundays.

When SEE attempted to renew its permit to hold the event on the street, the school objected, causing the city to withhold the renewal.

The city later issued a temporary permit, but according to protest organizer Gabrielle Frankel, who said she attends the weekly outdoor event "like it was church," several vendors told her Sunday may be the last time the market is set up in that neighborhood.

SEE's website, Farmernet.com, says the market will be open this Sunday "at its usual time and place (8 a.m. to 1 p.m.)," but further stated, "While we are happy to announce that the city has issued the market a four-week permit to continue operating, until early January, the issue is not resolved."

According to the L.A. Weekly, "The Hollywood market will be open this Sunday, but after that its future is uncertain."

The weekly reported a meeting to try and resolve the impasse is scheduled for Monday.
A representative for SEE was not available for comment today.

SEE's website states that, "Despite the fact that the market has already accommodated the film school by providing access to the film school's parking structure since 2007, the school is still not satisfied.

"It wants the Farmers' Market to vacate all of Ivar south of Selma so that they can have access to an additional 120 rooftop parking spaces — on a day when they are closed, do not even hold classes and routinely have abundant unused spaces in their primary garage to which they have uninterrupted access."

The Hollywood Farmers' Market is a "certified," open-air, weekly street market with about 90 farmers, 30 local artisans and 30 baked goods and prepared food vendors.

SEE asserts losing that section of Ivar could result in "a loss of 50 percent of the certified farmers and reduction of approximately one-third of the total vendors. It cannot be re-configured within the existing neighborhood without multiple ramifications — including the possibility of losing the Farmers' Market in its entirety."

The L.A. Film School issued a "fact sheet" noting the school believes the farmers' market "is a valuable institution in the Hollywood community and that the market should continue to operate."

It says that as the film school has grown, it has worked with the market "for a number of years and agreed to compromises that were mutually acceptable relating to parking and placement of vendor stalls.

The fact sheet also noted that the film school is open on weekends and students use the facility on Sundays to work on their projects.

(©2010 CBS Local Media, a division of CBS Radio Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Wire services contributed to this report.)

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.