A California city is moving to enact a permanent ban on new drive-thru restaurants, spurred on by a group of vocal locals who have organized to oppose a potential new In-N-Out location.
While many other cities (and states) openly court the privately owned, Southern California-founded burger chain in hopes of attracting its business, Culver City isn't swayed by the scent of animal-style fries and mustard-grilled Double-Doubles.
The stand-alone city within Los Angeles County voted on Monday to extend a recently enacted 45-day moratorium on any new drive-thrus for another 10.5 months, giving city officials a long enough runway to draft permanent legislation that will keep drive-thrus out of the city for good.
The call to change Culver City's drive-thru laws started when a group of area residents banded together to oppose a potential new In-N-Out location at the Studio Village Shopping Center at the corner of Sepulveda Boulevard and Sawtelle Boulevard. The burger chain has been holding community meetings about the proposed site since early February, showing renderings for a familiar red-and-white, nearly 4,000-square-foot restaurant with a 61-space parking lot and a drive-thru capable of holding 26 cars at a time. Locals showed up to that February meeting in droves, offering mostly disapproval at the notion of a busy drive-thru in their part of town.



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