Bryan Schwegler wrote:DougHuntingdon wrote:Isn't there a way for Sloane Pub and others to get around the smoking ban? I heard some bars are considering converting their ownership structure to 100% employee-owned to avert the smoking ban.
Doug
I don't think employee owned would get around the law. It's "family owned" businesses that only allow family to work there.
To go one further, I thought that I read that it was a family run business in which they live on the premises. It sounds ridiculous but then again the law was written without a plan for enforcement in place so what do you expect?
While this may have been better left to the market place, it sounds as if it's enforcement will be. Sure there are other regulations imposed by the government but unlike those that are enforced with routine health inspector visits, surprise visits from the ATF to crackdown on underage drinking and so on, this law's enforcement appears to be built on complaints from patrons. If Sloane Pub really has 90% smokers then I'm sure that the 10% that are not know what they're going to get when they walk in. There was plenty of arguments against the effects of the ban on bars in general and "shot and a beer" bars in particular. With the ban being statewide and not local (as Toledo's ban was or the first attempt at the Lakewood ban) and the procedures in place to warn, fine then ultimately revoke a license, it sounds as if this law will just be a cop out for struggling bars.
In Lakewood in particular I see two divergent choices. We have 57 bars in this city. That's more than 1/1000 residents, closer to half of that when you take out those under 21 and more likely 1/300 when you factor out those unlikely to "frequent" bars. Maybe a statistician can check my numbers on that. There may be a vast number of degrees to which could work but here are the extremes; 1) "Bar darwinism", only the strong survive- true capitalism I suppose 2) "strength in numbers", the largest industry in our city pulls together to help make one another successful and spread the costs of advertising- boy that sounds like business "socialism" but doesn't it seem to make sense.
Since there seems to be a trend here lately to misunderstand tone and distort messages of one another, allow me to clarify my position. The first step to improvement is assessing your resources and maximizing them. The smoking ban was not decided here alone. Fighting each other and creating a divisive atmosphere amongst ourselves will not make the ban go away.