Smokin'

full article -  http://www.nypost.com/news/regionalnews/75483.htm
 
CIG BAN LEAVES LOT OF 'EMPTIES' 
May 12, 2003 -- Business at New York bars and restaurants has plummeted by as much as 50 percent in the wake of the smoking ban - and the drop has already sparked layoffs and left some establishments on the brink of shutting their doors, a Post survey has found.

At Ruddy & Dean, a Staten Island hangout near a courthouse that's popular with district attorneys, lawyers and judges, bar business has been slashed by half. "If it weren't for private parties, I'd shut down," said owner Danny Mills. Business at Bill's Gay '90s in Midtown is off 50 percent overall. "If this keeps up, some of us might as well just close up shop," manager Richie Sporacchio complained.

 

What you can do in Austin, Texas

Show up at City Council mettings and express your views on the smoking ordinance, which is a "sleeper" issue that may sneak though without much citizen input unless you show up.  More details later on exactly where to go this evening to express your views.  At present this page is a work in progress which will include input from concerned citizens as they are sent to us via email at smoke@austinmayor.com , keep in mind that we'll be publishing these on this web page.

You can also post your views directly on the Spring, an Austin discussion forum website.

The debate and votes on the smoking ordinance will probably be this Thursday at 1:30 pm.

Austinmayor.com is making it easy for you to express your views to the city council.  Send an email to council@austinmayor.com and it will be forwarded to all the members of the City Council. 

As far as we can tell, Gus Garcia, Danny Thomas, Darryl Slusher and Raoul Alvarez are the Council members who will probably vote for the ordinance.

Will Wynn, Jackie Goodman and Betty Dunkerly are probably voting against the new ordinance.

That's the line up.  Darryl Slusher may be the swing vote if he decides to vote no or to abstain (more likely).

Smoking Ordinance in the News:

Austin Stories
Austin Chronicle, TX - Apr 17, 2003
... council's response to the "crisis," and the Texas ... on Mayor Gus Garcia's proposed no-smoking
ordinance ... the well-organized Tobacco-Free Coalition of Austin ...

Naked City
Austin Chronicle, TX - Apr 17, 2003
... Mayor Kirk Watson, and a dissatisfied Austin ... on legislation to authorize a Central
Texas ... big meeting -- featuring more debate of the smoking ordinance ...

Austin at Large: Smoke and Mirrors
Austin Chronicle, TX - Apr 10, 2003
... is a middle ground -- the existing smoking ordinance ... El Paso, all now with stricter
smoking ... Free Coalition is embarrassed that Austin does not lead Texas ...

Naked City
Austin Chronicle, TX - Apr 10, 2003
... Texas is more like Popeye's skinny girlfriend ... for corporations, small business needs
and keeping Austin ... but no action) on the draft smoking ordinance ...

CITY COUNCIL: Meeting to address ban on smoking
The Daily Texan, TX - Apr 10, 2003
... The Smokers Fighting Discrimination group, based in Katy, Texas ... Council passed 10-3
an ordinance banning smoking in ... The proposed ordinance for Austin ...

Dallas mayoral candidates get down to business
Dallas Business Journal, TX - Apr 22, 2003
... leaders to help pass legislation in Austin ... I voted against the anti-smoking ordinance ... SAENZ:
I do not believe the smoking ... the economic center of North Texas ...

Smoking Ordinance Now




Here are some key points of Austin's current smoking ordinance as it applies to bars and restaurants:
bulletHours: No smoking is allowed in restaurants between 6 am - 2 pm. Smoking is allowed between 2 pm - 6 am in a bar or lounge area, provided there is a separate ventilation system, and at least 25% of the space is reserved for nonsmokers.
bulletSmoking Areas: Restaurants which don't have a bar area may designate a smoking area, for use only between 10 pm - 6 am, provided smoke doesn't waft onto nonsmoking areas. The smoking area must not be larger in size than the number of customers usually requesting a smoking area, as determined by the owner.
bulletEntrances: Smoking is banned within 15 feet of any pedestrian entrance to a public place.
bulletBars: Smoking is allowed in bars, if they are not also used as dining areas; 25% of the bar space must be reserved for a nonsmoking area, which must have a separate ventilation system.
bulletLive Music Venues must offer at least 25% nonsmoking shows per week, of at least two hours in duration.
bulletSigns must be posted outside restaurants and bars indicating whether the establishment is nonsmoking only, or if smoking is allowed in designated areas.

Smoking Ordinance Proposed - A new, tougher smoking ordinance is proposed and is supported by an organization called Smoke-Free Austin Coalition, the details on the ordinance are on their web site.

Smoke-Free Austin Coalition

SMOKING BAN ORDINANCE, AUSTIN, TEXAS Resources Activated • PM and
RJR Smokers Call City Council Members Prior to the Hearing and Testify at the ...

http://www.smokefreeaustin.org

April 28, 2003
Poll Finds
62 Percent of
Austin Residents
Support Smoke-Free
Restaurants, Bars
and Music Venues

Why is a 100% smoke-free ordinance a good idea?

bulletSecondhand smoke causes health problems just like active smoking.
bulletSecondhand smoke is linked to cancer, heart disease and respiratory illness in non-smoking adults, and it is especially harmful to children.
bulletSecondhand smoke creates a serious occupational health hazard for hospitality workers, especially bar workers who suffer a 50 percent higher rate of lung cancer than the average office worker.
bulletMany people unwillingly are exposed to secondhand smoke while working or spending time in public venues.
bulletEveryone has a right to breathe clean indoor air!

http://smokefreeaustin.org links

bulletSecondhand smoke - all the effects of smoking, without the filters.
bulletGet the Facts!
bulletDoesn’t Austin already have a strong ordinance? NO
bulletHow can I support a 100% Smoke-Free Austin? Get involved!
bulletSmoke-Free Policy Doesn’t Hurt Business
bulletRead how the Tobacco Industry will Fight a Stronger Ordinance
About the Tobacco-Free Austin Coalition

Citizen Response




April 11, 2003:
Let me confess that I've been a smoker for most of my adult life. (People are surprised by this, just as they're surprised that I follow sports and go to church.) I am suitably ashamed -- the proper attitude with which to approach Austin's proposed smoking ban, up for public hearing (but not a vote) at the City Council tonight. I think it's a dumb idea, a stance many will expect from a lowly and despicable tobacco addict. Even if I were (still) a proud ex-smoker, I'd think this was a dumb idea. But I also think it's a done deal.

The times are propitious for ban proponents, flush from their success in newly smoke-free New York City, and the Tobacco-Free Austin Coalition is pouring it on to get Austin's 1994 Smoking in Public Places Ordinance (the "SIPPO") tightened up to create a "100% Smoke-Free Austin." They even have yard signs, and they'll be out in numbers at the council tonight. As, no doubt, will be the club owners and potentates of the Live Music Capital, who surmise -- accurately -- that the proposed ordinance is specifically targeted at bars.

There is no middle ground here; if you support a tougher SIPPO, you're a Nazi, and if you oppose it, you're a barbarian who doesn't care if people die. Actually, there is a middle ground -- the existing smoking ordinance, which in my humble opinion has done a pretty good job of making Austin the Clean Air City that the guy on the airport voice-over talks about with such pride. You have to break a sweat in Austin to find a public place where you can smoke, as we notice when in other locales with looser laws. I was recently in a diner outside Tampa that even at 8am looked and smelled like the Continental Club at last call, and I'm quite glad this is not allowed under current law in Austin.

Proponents of a complete ban decry the SIPPO's 18 exemptions, as if a double-digit number proves it's a worthless sieve of a law. But most of those exemptions are different ways of saying "bar" -- other than drinking houses, you'll encounter secondhand smoke in Austin in bingo parlors and bowling alleys, neither of which are thick on the ground here. (And, of course, in the state Capitol.) The most obvious loophole in the SIPPO -- for restaurants with less than 50 seats -- is almost never used; the only restaurant I can think of where nonsmokers have to suck up exhaust is the Star Seeds Cafe. That is, if there are any nonsmokers at Star Seeds. I can't verify this fact.

Monique "Mee" Davila, Sam and Bob listener

I sent this to the council this morning and heard you on KVET and thought I share. I didn't want to over bore them with detail, just my simple opinion.

I am for this ordinance, having asthma and an over sensitive nose I look forward to the day I can go to a pool hall or bowling alley and be able to breath and not be medicated the next day.

People keep saying there will be a loss of business, maybe, in the beginning. But as with all change Austinites will get tired of being home and be out in enjoying Austin. And maybe all those non-smokers who hated being around the smokers will take their places when smokers boycott public places. I know I be glad to be out in public without the smoke. Remember the restaurant smoking ordinance, that did not stop people from eating and if you look around there are many more restaurants in Austin.

I just pray that the Austin City Council will vote for the smoking ordinance and realize people have always been skeptics to change.

Since this effects people's health, think of all the positive rewards, think of the money saved public assistant health care.

Thank you for your time.

V. Monique Davila

Monique "Moe" Davila
Longhorn  a breed apart because of its toughness and strength, determination to survive, and will to win against all odds.  Hook'em Horns!

 

Carl Speed, Sam and Bob listener

I don't live in Austin, so I can't vote in Austin. Consequently, my opinion doesn't mean much to the people who aren't concerned with whether I will support them, since they already know they can't count on my vote. Which really stinks because I spend most of my waking life in Austin each day, so I'm more affected by what they do here than by what the city fathers of Dripping Springs do.

1. I am not a smoker.

2. I have never been a smoker.

3. I would prefer to be where there isn't smoke. I expect a smoke-free office, but entertainment--eating/drinking/dancing--is a different story.

4. I believe the world would be much safer if people didn't smoke, but that's the choice of those who smoke.

5. I believe the private property rights of the people who own restaurants and bars take precedence over all of the above.

6. I believe freedom of choice and competition in a free market economy should be the determining factors in whether a proprietor decides to allow or prohibit smoking in his place of business.

If I'm with friends who want to smoke and a restaurant doesn't allow it, we'll go elsewhere. If I want a smoke-free meal and the restaurant can't keep the smoke out of my face, I'll go elsewhere. Ultimately, the owner of the business has to be accountable to his customers and potential customers or he'll go out of business. The risk is entirely his to bear; the government doesn't stand to lose any investment. Unless the government wants to ensure businesses against lost revenue when they can't even balance their own budget, they need to stick to doing those things we need government for and let businesses do what they already know how to do.

If I had a say in the matter, I'd vote against the smoking ordinance. On the other hand, it might be preferable for them to pass it so that the affected businesses would have a cause of action for a class action suit against the city. It would be more expensive, but in the long run, if they prevailed (I'm assuming they'd have to get at least as far as the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals), it might prevent more such infringements on private property rights in the future.

Carl Speed

Dripping Springs

 

Beerland sez:

Friends of Beerland,

Right now, the Austin City Council is considering an out and out ban on smoking in all public places, including bars, restaurants, live music venues, coffee shops, and even bingo halls and bus stops.

Patios and most places currently considered "smoking areas" will not be exempt. (The outside of Emo's and Casino el Camino will be non-smoking. The patios at Sacred Cup Coffeehouse and Spiderhouse--hell, every public patio--will be non-smoking.) Beerland, Room 710, Flamingo Cantina, Emo's, Casino el Camino, Little City, The Parlor, La Cucaracha, Sacred Cup, Red-Eyed Fly, Elysium, Stubb's, and many more of your favorite local businesses will be completely non-smoking. You will not even be able to smoke outside the clubs either, not within twenty-five feet. That means no one can smoke anywhere on Sixth Street or Red River.

You might know about similar smoking ordinances in other parts of the country, like Dallas and California and New York. Most of these ordinances have special allowances for bars. Austin's will not. Austin's proposed ordinance is based on the Helena, Montana ordinance which was repealed as unconstitutional six months after it passed. But please don't think your favorite hang-outs can last six months with even fewer customers during an already depressed economy. Twenty-five percent of bars went out of business shortly after the smoking ordinance was passed in Tempe, Arizona, a city demographically similar to Austin.

Even if you don't smoke, look around you next time you're out. Most people in bars do smoke. While only 20% of Austinites smoke, it is estimated that 50-90% of clubgoers smoke. If they can't smoke in bars, they'll simply quit coming. Acoustic Cafe was a non-smoking bar on Sixth Street. You probably don't remember it because it didn't last long. Bars and live music venues depend on the business of people who happen to smoke. Look again, musicians tend to also be smokers. Without smokers, live music venues don't stand a chance.

Please take the time to tell Mayor Gus Garcia and the members of the City Coucil to not change the smoking ordinance we already have. Check out keepaustinfree.com for more information and a form letter you can send. Or write your own. Or call their offices. Do something.

Thanks for your valuable time and priceless help,
Randall Stockton



Mayor Gus Garcia
Phone: (512) 974-2250
Gus.Garcia@ci.austin.tx.us
P. O. Box 1088
Austin, Texas 78767


Mayor Pro Tem Jackie Goodman
Phone: (512) 974-2255
Jackie.Goodman@ci.austin.tx.us
P. O. Box 1088
Austin, Texas 78767


Raul Alvarez
Council Member Place 2
Raul.Alvarez@ci.austin.tx.us
Phone: (512) 974-2264
P. O. Box 1088
Austin, Texas 78767


Betty Dunkerley
Council Member Place 4
Betty.Dunkerley@ci.austin.tx.us
Phone: (512) 974-2258
P. O. Box 1088
Austin, Texas 78767


Daryl Slusher
Council Member Place 1
Daryl.Slusher@ci.austin.tx.us
Phone: (512) 974-2260
P. O. Box 1088
Austin, Texas 78767


Danny Thomas
Council Member Place 6
Danny.Thomas@ci.austin.tx.us
Phone: (512) 974-2266
P. O. Box 1088
Austin, Texas 78767


Will Wynn
Council Member Place 5
Will.Wynn@ci.austin.tx.us
Phone: (512) 974-2256
P. O. Box 1088
Austin, Texas 78767



Keep Austin Free organization:

 
WARNING: Proposed revision of the current Austin smoking ordinance may result in fewer jobs, lower tax revenues and a reduction in choices.
Click here to send a letter to the city council.

Click here to join
our mailing list

 

Friends,

The Austin City Council is considering a total Smoking ban (all public areas including all bars, restaurants, and night clubs). Austin already has a good smoking ordinance with about 90% voluntary compliance. Here's the story:

Once again a small group of loud people http://www.smokefreeaustin.org/ are trying to impose their narrow way of thinking on Austin. What's worse, They are trying to do it in secret. You are not going to find this on the front page of the Statesman.... why... because they want to sneak it though...why....because it is bad for Austin. Today, AISD announced lay offs because of budget problems.... Everyday in the paper we read about cut backs in services due to budget problems.... It's no wonder the city council wants to keep this quiet. In a time when the city council should be concentrating on reviving Austin's economy and encouraging outside investment in our community; they are considering revising an already good smoking policy, in way to hurt established local businesses and deplete sales tax revenue.

In the last 10 years Austin has gone from the most affordable city in Texas to one of the most expensive cities to live in, do business in, and invest in. We need to tell Mayor Gus and the rest of the Council "Work on what's broke" (the Austin Economy), and don't waste our time fixing what already is working (the current smoking ordinance).

Plan of action:
If you agree with this send an Email to the editorial section of the statesman letters@statesman.com and CC: in all the city council members or click here to send a form letter.

Let's make our voices heard.

     
 

Mayor Gus Garcia
Phone: (512) 974-2250
Gus.Garcia@ci.austin.tx.us
P. O. Box 1088
Austin, Texas 78767

Mayor Pro Tem Jackie Goodman
Phone: (512) 974-2255
Jackie.Goodman@ci.austin.tx.us
P. O. Box 1088
Austin, Texas 78767

Raul Alvarez
Council Member Place 2
Raul.Alvarez@ci.austin.tx.us
Phone: (512) 974-2264
P. O. Box 1088
Austin, Texas 78767

Betty Dunkerley
Council Member Place 4
Betty.Dunkerley@ci.austin.tx.us
Phone: (512) 974-2258
P. O. Box 1088
Austin, Texas 78767

Daryl Slusher
Council Member Place 1
Daryl.Slusher@ci.austin.tx.us
Phone: (512) 974-2260
P. O. Box 1088
Austin, Texas 78767

Danny Thomas
Council Member Place 6
Danny.Thomas@ci.austin.tx.us
Phone: (512) 974-2266
P. O. Box 1088
Austin, Texas 78767

Will Wynn
Council Member Place 5
Will.Wynn@ci.austin.tx.us
Phone: (512) 974-2256
P. O. Box 1088
Austin, Texas 78767

Sponsors of KeepAustinFree.com

INDIVIDUAL BUSINESSES:

219
Austin Land & Cattle Co.
The Back Room
Bahamas Breeze
B.D. Riley's
The Bitter End
The Blind Pig Pub
The Boiling Pot
Bone Daddy's
Buffalo Billiards
Calames
Camino Real
Carnival
The Carousel Lounge
Carlos and Charlie's
Casino Camino
Cedar Street
China Town
The Chugging Monkey
Chuys/Hula Hut
Cool River Cafe
Crazy Lady
Cuba Libre
Dallas Night Club
Dart Bowl
Dave and Busters
Desperado
Dicks Deja Disco
Dog and Duck Pub
Don's Depot
El Arroyo
El Rey
Element
El Mercado
Expose
Fado
The Filling Station
Flores-Gonzalo
Gatsby's
Gino's
Granite Cafe
Gueros
Hard Rock Cafe
Hickory Street Grill
Hills Cafe
Hoecks Pizza
Hooters
Iron Cactus
Jaime's
Jazz
JC's Bar and Grill
Jovitas Cantina
Juan in a Million
The Landing Strip
La Palapa
Lavaca Street
Little Long Horn
Louis 106
Ludwig's
Malaga
Mezzaluna
Midtown
Miguels La Bodeg
Momos
Nasty's
North X Northwest
Pecan Street
Penthouse
Red Eyed Fly
Red Fez
Reed's
Ritz
Ritz Lounge
Roy's
Saba
Sam's Boat
The Saxon Pub
So Ho
Speakeasy
Stubbs
Studio 6
Sugars
Texas Chili Parlor
Treasure Island
Twin Liquors
Wet Salon


BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS:

The Downtown Business Alliance

The Austin Warehouse District Association

The Austin Billiard Parlor Association

 

Links to the New York City Smoking Ordinance