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Economy
California City Votes to End Hot Sauce Dispute
2014-05-30
[An Nahar] The fiery
...a single two-syllable word carrying connotations of both incoherence and viciousness. A fiery delivery implies an audience of rubes and yokels, preferably forming up into a mob...
fight is apparently over between the makers of a popular hot sauce and a small Southern Caliphornia, an impregnable bastion of the Democratic Party, city that said its factory's smells were unbearable, after the Irwindale City Council voted to drop a public nuisance declaration and lawsuit against the makers of Sriracha hot sauce.
Well, thank goodness for that! I know we all were worried, all except Deacon Blues, anyway. He makes his own.
The dual moves Wednesday night brought an effective end to the spicy-air dispute that had Sriracha devotees worried about future sauce shortages and had suitors including the state of Texas offering its producer, Huy Fong Foods, a friendlier home.

The closed-session council vote was unanimous with one councilman abstaining due to a conflict of interest, the San Gabriel Valley Tribune (http://bit.ly/1tSfP9Z) reported.

Residents and business leaders praised the vote that some called overdue.

"Thank you so much for saving Irwindale because we were headed in the wrong direction," Irwindale Fred Barbosa, who lives in Irwindale, told the Tribune after the vote.

Bob Machuca of the Los Angeles County Economic Development Corp. said the resolution showed Caliphornia, an impregnable bastion of the Democratic Party, is "open for business" and is "what we needed to do a long time ago."

The city of about 1,400 people had been at odds with the company, which recently moved its main operations there, after residents complained last year of spicy odors burned their throats and eyes.

It wasn't immediately clear what prompted the council change its position, but the company had been asking the city for more time as it worked with regional air-quality officials on a plan to make the smell go away.

But city officials met behind closed doors Tuesday with company CEO David Tran and representatives of Gov. Jerry Governor Moonbeam Brown
... those who ignore history are bound to repeat it ...
's Business and Economic Development Office. Afterward Mayor Mark Breceda said he would ask the council to end the fight.

Tran, an immigrant from Vietnam whose company produces several chili sauces based on the flavors of his native country, said Tuesday that he installed stronger filters at the plant, and he's confident they will block fumes when the chili-grinding season begins in August.
Posted by:Fred

#4  That the idea was even entertained would have me quietly packing.

Hey everyone excited about the leaving California taxes?!
Posted by: swksvolFF   2014-05-30 21:45  

#3  Some body explained to the Council that even if they won this debate, they were going to lose, as taxes come from taxpayers, and were likely to come up short. It, however, doesn't mean end of story, just end of round one.
Stupid will get loose; it always does.
Posted by: ed in texas   2014-05-30 07:22  

#2  Irwindale is an industrial city (1400 residents) home to a quarry and a big ol stinky brewery next to the 210. This is a smart move as the asshats that complained and got in a tizzy were about to lose a large employer and tax source. Idiots
Posted by: Frank G   2014-05-30 07:17  

#1  Once a year my father canned his own hot relish for himself and a few of his friends and neighbors. The fumes were so strong I thought the paint on the kitchen walls would curl up and fall off. He was proud of his hot relish from hell.
Posted by: Bubba Graiting8281   2014-05-30 00:45  

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