Local & Community
Palm Springs To Consider Four Million Dollar Land Purchase for New Fire Station Displacing Local Homeless Charity
PALM SPRINGS, California — The Palm Springs City Council is convening to vote on a proposed four million dollar land acquisition intended for the construction of a brand-new downtown fire station. The city aims to approve a purchase and sale agreement with Town and Country, LLC to acquire roughly 0.95 acres of property located at the southwest corner of Andreas Road and North Indian Canyon Drive. While local residents generally agree that the city's aging Fire Station Number 1 is severely overdue for a modern replacement, the specific location choice has generated significant community friction due to its immediate impact on a vital local charity organization.
The development parcel encompasses 181 North Indian Canyon Drive, which serves as the current operational hub for Well in the Desert, a dedicated non-profit organization that provides daily meals, food distribution, and critical social services to the regional unhoused and low-income population. In late April, the organization received an unexpected 30-day notice to terminate its lease from the property developer, Grit Development. The initial eviction timeline was later extended to Monday, June 15, 2026. Non-profit officials expressed frustration with the sudden displacement process, pointing out that the legal notice was mistakenly addressed to the charity's former president, Arlene Rosenthal, who passed away three years ago, and relied on a lease agreement dating back two decades.
Well in the Desert President Matt Naylor stated that while the organization has no objection to the construction of a new public safety facility, the rapid timeline leaves the charity without a viable alternative site to store food and coordinate its regional operations. The abrupt displacement is expected to hit vulnerable desert residents hard, forcing the imminent closure of a weekly Saturday food bank that provides groceries to roughly 250 local families, translating to nearly 1,000 individuals who struggle with food insecurity. Naylor criticized municipal officials and developers for a perceived lack of transitional support, noting that the city offered little more than a generic wish of good luck rather than actively helping the group secure an alternative location in an expensive and highly competitive local real estate market.
According to municipal documents, city staff surveyed seven potential downtown sites before selecting the Indian Canyon property, determining it offers optimal emergency response times for the urban core. An independent facility assessment completed last year revealed that the existing Fire Station Number 1 is severely undersized, structurally deficient under modern seismic codes, and unable to fit modern aerial ladder trucks within its bays. If the City Council approves the land purchase contract, the project will still require subsequent design reviews from the Historic Site Preservation Board due to the presence of historical structures on the plot, as well as a comprehensive environmental review before demolition and construction can officially commence.
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By: NBC Palm Springs
June 10, 2026


