Not that the merits of the issue�or even stories like this�will move
politicians corrupted by tobacco lobbyists and bar-owners who seems to have
more clout than any "citizen," but let's jump down the throats of all our
legislators and institute a statewide smoking ban that means something.
The phony stories of bars going belly-up have been a smokescreen for undue
influence-peddling and scare tactics.

Minnesota is so far overdue for these changes, it's all but laughable.

Call your senators and reps. Find their numbers/addresses at:
<http://www.leg.state.mn.us>

Andy Driscoll
Crocus Hill
--
The price of apathy towards public affairs is to be ruled by evil men: Plato
--
Visit our weblog: http://bumpasblog.blogspot.com

------------------------------------------------------------------------

February 6, 2005

In Barrooms, Smoking Ban Is Less Reviled
By JIM RUTENBERG and LILY KOPPEL

Back in 2002, when the City Council was weighing Mayor Michael R.
Bloomberg's proposal to eliminate smoking from all indoor public places, few
opponents were more fiercely outspoken than James McBratney, president of
the Staten Island Restaurant and Tavern Association.

He frequently ripped Mr. Bloomberg as a billionaire dictator with a
prohibitionist streak that would undo small businesses like his bar and his
restaurant. Visions of customers streaming to the legally smoke-filled pubs
of New Jersey kept him awake at night.

Asked last week what he thought of the now two-year-old ban, Mr. McBratney
sounded changed. "I have to admit," he said sheepishly, "I've seen no
falloff in business in either establishment." He went on to describe what he
once considered unimaginable: Customers actually seem to like it, and so
does he.

By many predictions, the smoking ban, which went into effect on March 30,
2003, was to be the beginning of the end of the city's reputation as the
capital of grit. Its famed nightlife would wither, critics warned, bar and
restaurant businesses would sink, tourists would go elsewhere, and the mayor
who wrought it all would pay a hefty price in the polls. And then there were
those who said that city smokers, a rebellious class if ever there was one,
simply would not abide.

But a review of city statistics, as well as interviews last week with dozens
of bar patrons, workers and owners, found that the ban has not had the
crushing effect on New York's economic, cultural and political landscapes
predicted by many of its opponents.

Employment in restaurants and bars, one indicator of the city's service
economy, has risen slightly since the ban went into effect, as has the
number of restaurant permits requested and held, according to city records,
although those increases could be attributed in part to several factors,
including a general improvement in the city's economy.

City health inspectors report that 98 percent of bars and restaurants are in
compliance with the rules, though some critics question those statistics.
Wrath at Mr. Bloomberg, at least pertaining to the smoking ban, seems to be
abating.

There are still those cursing the ban as an affront to their civil
liberties, and some bar and restaurant owners say that it has undoubtedly
caused a decline in business. City officials say they doubt that contention,
pointing to data from the first year of the ban showing that restaurant and
bar tax receipts were up 8.7 percent over the previous year's. They said
they were still waiting for more detailed and current data from the state.

But a vast majority of bar and restaurant patrons interviewed last week,
including self-described hard-core smokers, said they were surprised to find
themselves pleased with cleaner air, cheaper dry-cleaning bills and a new
social order created by the ban.

All of this comes as great relief to Dr. Thomas R. Frieden, commissioner of
the city's Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, who took his job on a
promise from the mayor that the smoking ban would be given priority. "It was
not a pleasant time," he said of the initial uproar over the ban. "There was
a myth that this was very unpopular."

Dr. Frieden credits the apparent success of the new smoking rules here with
encouraging other seemingly unlikely places to follow suit, or at least to
consider doing so. Among them are Boston, Virginia, Australia, Ireland and
Italy. Last week, the City Council in Philadelphia began reviewing a newly
proposed bill to make bars and restaurants smoke-free.

The councilman who introduced the bill in Philadelphia, Michael A. Nutter,
cited New York as an inspiration. "This is kind of the epitome of the song:
'If you can make it there,' " he said in an interview. "What people are
saying is, 'If New York can deal with clean-air legislation, why can't we?'
"

Mr. Nutter said he was not worried about the political ramifications.

Mr. Bloomberg's Republican critics have indicated they will raise the
smoking rules during the Republican primary campaign as an example of what
they call his Democratic tendency toward regulation. But many of the mayor's
staunchest opponents said they thought the ban would have no effect on his
re-election bid. One of his Democratic challengers, Gifford Miller, the City
Council speaker, helped secure the ban's passage. And a leading contender
for the Democratic mayoral nomination, Fernando Ferrer, has said he would
not seek to overturn it.

"I thought he would lose 50,000 votes simply based on the smoking ban," said
Robert Bookman, a lawyer for the New York Nightlife Association, a trade
group that aggressively fought the ban. "I'm not so sure anymore."

That is no small thing for Mr. Bloomberg, who once faced hecklers in the
streets because of the smoking ban, and whose drop in popularity after it
was put in effect was illustrated by The New York Post in a front-page bar
graph with cigarette butts.

Mr. Bookman did not dispute most of the good-news numbers the city presented
in relation to the smoking ban, though he disagrees with the conclusion that
the ban has not had an adverse impact on restaurants and bars.

"Clearly employment is up in New York City going into 2005 or the end of
2004 compared with the year before the smoking ban went into effect," he
said. "The year before was 2002; 2002 was almost a depression in New York
City. It was the recession plus the 9/11 economic impact. Everybody's doing
better in New York compared with 2002."

Mr. Bookman said that the nightlife industries would be doing better still
without the ban. But he conceded during an interview that his group had all
but given up any lingering hope of overturning the city's provision. It is
instead focusing in part on what he said were unfair enforcement issues,
like ticketing bar owners for the misbehavior of smoking patrons or for an
increase in noise complaints drawn by customers smoking outside. City
officials say noise complaints have risen because the city's 311 complaint
line has made it easier to file them, not because of outdoor smoking.

The turncoats of Mr. Bookman's once vocal movement can be found on the
sidewalk on any given night. Huddled in a tent at the Bohemian Hall and Beer
Garden in the Astoria section of Queens on Wednesday and chain-smoking by
two heat lamps, Kate Bly, who teaches English to foreign exchange students,
said she was surprised by her own positive reaction to the measure, which
she had expected would be terrible.

"I was really against the smoking ban," she said. "I thought, bars are for
sinful things, smoking, drinking. Now my reaction has changed. I used to
feel clammy, stinky, disgusting. Now there's a nice breakup to the evening
and a new crowd."

Jason Sitek, 31, said he had similarly begun to enjoy the ban, even if
smoke-free bars subtract from what he used to think a New York City bar
should be. "The whole nature of New York City and the bar is you can go into
a smoky atmosphere," he said. "It's like Disney World now."

Still, he said, smoke-free bars have their advantages. "You realize you stop
stinking, you don't smell like an ashtray," he said on Tuesday night as he
smoked outside Spike Hill, a bar in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn.

The temperature was hovering near 30 degrees, but down the street, in front
of Rosemary's Greenpoint Tavern, Brian Rennie, 23, said he did not mind that
he was forced outdoors to smoke. "I like going outside," he said. "I like to
get fresh air."

Several smokers cited other advantages.

"I'm all for it. My dry-cleaning bill's gone way down," said John Payne, 36,
who was smoking on Tuesday night outside Toad Hall, in SoHo. "And I'm
smoking less."

A friend, Bill Cauclanis, 29, said, "There's a secondary scene now outside
of bars - a smoker's scene."

He added: "You can meet a girl out here. Strike up a conversation."

What is good for singles like Mr. Cauclanis is bad for bartenders, who
cannot so easily go outside and who find themselves increasingly cut out of
the social scene in which they centrally stood. Now, they are often placed
in the role of hall monitors, chiding those who disobediently light up, said
Barry Crooks, who was tending bar at Toad Hall. Mr. Crooks, an owner of Toad
Hall, said he was far more worried about a falloff in business of at least
10 percent, which he said was a result of the new smoking ordinance. "It
hurt the volume of business," Mr. Crooks said.

While such complaints were once more common, and perhaps more heated, there
are still plenty of them. "It hurts," said John Mulvey, owner of Bridget's
Public House on Staten Island.

Public acceptance of the ban has "come around a little bit," Mr. Mulvey
said. Business was off 25 percent right after the ban took effect, he said,
but now that decline has stabilized at about 5 percent. And while Mr. Mulvey
is no longer furious over the anti-smoking ordinance, he says it bothers him
that he is not free to run his business as he sees fit - without government
intervention.

Mr. Mulvey still has a champion in Audrey Silk, founder of NYC Clash, or
Citizens Lobby Against Smoker Harassment. In an interview, Ms. Silk vowed to
continue fighting the ban. "We're not giving up," she said.

Copyright 2005�The New York Times Company

------ End of Forwarded Message

_____________________________________________
To Join:   St. Paul Issues Forum Rules Discussion
Email:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
____________________________________________
NEW ADDRESS FOR LIST:     [email protected]

To subscribe, modify subscription, or get your password - visit:
http://www.mnforum.org/mailman/listinfo/stpaul

Archive Address:
   http://www.mnforum.org/mailman/private/stpaul/

Reply via email to