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usonian

(13,859 posts)
Mon May 13, 2024, 10:35 PM May 2024

California's wealthiest farm family plans mega-warehouse complex that would reshape Kern economy

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-05-08/resnick-wonderful-mega-warehouse-kern-county


Now, looking to capitalize on the seismic shift to online shopping, the Resnicks want to position Kern County as a new frontier for the industrial-scale warehousing that is key to connecting customers with their goods. Wonderful is pushing to more than double the size of its industrial park by converting 1,800 acres of its own almond groves into additional warehousing space.
...
The company is working with local officials on plans for a new highway that would route trucks away from central Shafter. It also plans to funnel at least $120 million into an inland rail terminal, expected to be completed next spring. The goal is to move more products from coastal ports by rail to Shafter, reducing traffic on State Route 99, already one of the busiest truck routes in California.
...
Many Shafter residents say the opportunity for steady, relatively well-paying work in areas other than farming and oil would come as a welcome addition. But some are concerned that doubling-down on an industry that will bring more truck and train travel to one of the nation’s most polluted corridors can’t help but have negative consequences.
...
“Warehouses are both job creators and job destroyers,” said Ellen Reese, co-director of the Inland Empire Labor & Community Center at UC Riverside. She noted that automation is reducing the number of warehouse employees, but not necessarily making jobs safer.


Can't capture all the nuances in 4 paragraphs, so check the article.

Archived at https://archive.ph/wamK0 if you run into a paywall. I didn't, but I just cleared history and cookies.
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California's wealthiest farm family plans mega-warehouse complex that would reshape Kern economy (Original Post) usonian May 2024 OP
getting rid of 1800 acres of almond groves would be good at least ZonkerHarris May 2024 #1
Presumably they retain the water rights and will use them equally ill... RockRaven May 2024 #2
ugh ZonkerHarris May 2024 #4
Not mentioned in the article: the impact on family farms Auggie May 2024 #3
Too me the term "farm family" is very misleading FHRRK May 2024 #5

RockRaven

(16,280 posts)
2. Presumably they retain the water rights and will use them equally ill...
Mon May 13, 2024, 11:05 PM
May 2024

by selling/leasing them to the highest payer, which may mean something even more noxious -- desert golf courses, low density suburbs on the edge of nowhere, casino resorts -- or maybe the warehouses/transportation will use it all anyway.

Auggie

(31,802 posts)
3. Not mentioned in the article: the impact on family farms
Tue May 14, 2024, 07:58 AM
May 2024

The Resnick monopoly gets stronger with better, faster distribution.

Their wealth allows them to wield tremendous influence in California politics among both Democrats and Repukes: https://www.opensecrets.org/search?q=stewart+resnick&type=donors

On a side note, I read that Resnick farming uses more water than all of L.A.

Thanks for sharing, usonian.

FHRRK

(969 posts)
5. Too me the term "farm family" is very misleading
Sun May 19, 2024, 05:42 PM
May 2024

The Resniks are industrialists. Cornered and took over the Almond, Citrus and Pistachio market via obtaining water rights.

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