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Bellflower Council Votes to Enforce Ban on Cargo Containers

January 01, 1995|STEVE EAMES, SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

Metal cargo containers--ideal storage space to some Bellflower residents and businesses but eyesores to others--apparently are about to hit the road out of town.

A divided Bellflower City Council voted recently to order businesses and residents to get rid of the containers. Containers have never been permitted in the city, but the ban has been ignored.


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"They're ugly," Councilman Ray T. Smith said in explaining why he wanted shipping containers banished from the city.

He joined Mayor Ken Cleveland and Councilman Randy Bomgaars in ordering officials to enforce the ban. Council members Ruth A. Gilson and Art Olivier dissented, saying they did not want the city to appear unfriendly toward businesses.

"We all want to clean up Bellflower, but we can't come down with an iron fist," Gilson said.

The council majority initially decided businesses should have three years and residents one year to ship containers out of town, but then sent the proposal back to the Planning Commission for further study to determine if other deadlines should be set.

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"I don't know what they're trying to pull," said Lloyd Basham, who keeps two storage containers behind his Alondra Boulevard engine-rebuilding shop. "I'd just like to see them make up their minds."

The council decision to enforce the ban came after more than a year of study and debate on shipping containers, which are commonly used to carry goods on ships, trains and trucks. It was in keeping with the city's effort to shed an anything-goes image.

The city recently beefed up its code enforcement staff from one officer to three to tackle widespread building code violations. City leaders said they hope the cleanup ultimately will make Bellflower more attractive to new businesses.

Despite the city's ban on shipping containers, they have sprouted behind, next to, and even in front of local businesses and homes in recent years.

Chief Auto Parts, for example, stores motor oil in a shipping container on its front parking lot on Alondra Boulevard. The Sizzler restaurant on Artesia Boulevard has a container behind the building.

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Containers typically are 8 feet wide, 8 feet 6 inches high and up to 40 feet in length. They are popular because they are sturdy, dustproof, fireproof and difficult for thieves to crack. Although not cheap--one businessman said he paid $2,200 apiece for two containers--they are not as costly as adding onto an existing building.

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