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Arcadia planning panel approves proposed mall

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Times Staff Writer

Arcadia this week came one step closer to approving an 830,000-square-foot outdoor shopping center near the Santa Anita racetrack, the latest round in a bitter fight between two prominent mall companies.

For more than two years the normally sleepy San Gabriel Valley city has been embroiled in a battle between developer Rick Caruso, who is known for his signature open-air shopping villages such as The Grove, and the existing Westfield Santa Anita Mall, a traditional indoor mall that opposes a new neighbor.

The Arcadia Planning Commission on Wednesday voted unanimously to recommend approval of The Shops at Santa Anita, the new mall, to the City Council.

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The proposal is expected to be approved by the council next month, city staff said.

But the proposal probably will hit some bumps after that: Opponents plan a ballot referendum against the mall later this year.

They say that not enough demand exists for new commercial space and cite concerns about traffic, pollution and crime.

“It just doesn’t make sense to have another mall next to an existing mall in a community of 25,000 homes,” said Sung Tse, a member of the executive board of Arcadia First!, a group funded by Westfield that opposes the development.

The 4,000-member nonprofit has inundated residents with full-page ads in local newspapers and has mailed letters, postcards and DVDs to residents several times a week as the City Council moves closer to reaching a decision, Tse said.

Caruso Affiliated has countered with its own newspaper ads.

Rick Caruso said the new development would boost business at the existing mall and racetrack.

He said Westfield’s opposition to his development was anti-competitive, based on fear of lower leases.

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“Westfield is scared of it because they’re living in a past world where all these indoor malls had these little fiefdoms,” he said.

Westfield officials could not be reached for comment late Thursday.

Wednesday’s Planning Commission meeting was the second of the week on the issue.

After 750 residents showed up to raise impassioned pleas on both sides at a city Planning Commission meeting Monday -- prompting supervision by police and the fire marshal, Assistant City Manager Don Penman said -- a second meeting was convened Wednesday.

The conflict echoes Caruso’s fight to build the Americana at Brand project in Glendale.

That project is under construction next to the Glendale Galleria.

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tony.barboza@latimes.com

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