(The Center Square) – The Seattle City Council on Tuesday unanimously approved an emergency ordinance that bans anti-competitive covenants that prevent new grocery stores and pharmacies from opening in former locations.
This measure aims to address growing concerns about food and medicine deserts – a geographic area with limited access to healthy, affordable food and essential medicines – in the Emerald City. There are food and medicine deserts in several Seattle neighborhoods, including Beacon Hill, Georgetown, Northgate, Rainier Beach, and Delridge, among others.
The newly passed Council Bill 121094 makes “restrictive covenants” illegal. These agreements – put on a property’s deed or lease – block efforts to bring new grocery stores and pharmacies into existing spaces that could easily accommodate them. Former retailers sometimes do this to prevent competitors from opening in their old locations.
“Access to food is a human right and should not be limited due to barriers put in place by grocery store owners through restrictive covenants,” Seattle City Councilmember Debora Juarez said in a statement.
The legislation is an interim ordinance that went into effect immediately upon being signed by Mayor Bruce Harrell the same day. It’s in effect for one year.
The city will conduct an analysis over the next year to inform and prepare permanent legislation.
According to a news release, there have been at least two covenants restricting a property’s future use as a grocery store on Seattle properties. These covenants limited the square footage of any future grocery store at that location for as long as 50 years.
Council Bill 121094 was proposed by Harrell and City Council President Sara Nelson after several store closures were announced, including Whole Foods Market in Capitol Hill and Fred Meyer in Lake City. The legislation also declares a public health emergency due to the recent store closures.
Along with this legislation, the mayor also recently issued an executive order directing city officials to explore acquiring the property of the former grocery store in Lake City to address food desert concerns in the neighborhood.
Additionally, the executive order calls for looking for ways for the city to acquire properties suitable for grocery stores in the future and to develop legislation changing land use, zoning, and permitting regulations to encourage more stores in at-risk neighborhoods. Plans call for the city to then find a third party to operate those sites.
Government involvement in grocery stores has been the focus of some national attention recently due to New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani’s backing of city-owned grocery stores.
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Harrell’s opponent in the Seattle mayoral race, Katie Wilson, supports exploring publicly backed grocery stores to address food deserts. She envisions the city partnering with a private grocery provider or a union to ensure food access, not necessarily running the store itself. Her proposal involves a “public-option” store to keep food affordable and accessible in neighborhoods that lose grocery stores, according to UFCW 3000.
Critics of government involvement in grocery stores have raised concerns about inefficiency, competition, costs, and political manipulation.

