5/15/2009 3:10:40 PM
I don't think anyone would be willing to pay $73,000 to allow smoking, but I also doubt an inspector would visit a particular place nearly that frequently.In Charlotte I think there are like 175+ restaurants or bars within a 5 block radius of center city...seems like a lot of ground to cover, and thats just a small area of Charlotte]
5/15/2009 3:26:21 PM
^ depends - $73k/year/per bar could easily pay the full salary for an inspector plus a lot of profit for the State. I mean, just assign one guy to downtown Charlotte and every night he walks from bar to bar writing tickets. Before long he's paid for himself and everythign else is profit
5/15/2009 3:38:00 PM
I'll admit, that part is ambiguous.However, both you and I can be confident that so long as a hookah bar is in operation for a given night it is in violation of the law. So can a local health inspector.Sammy's, down the street, may ignore it many many times until customers inform the local health inspector, and I'll admit I don't know who this is. Even after that, they may have deniability that "it was the customer" and could sustainably play cat and mouse with the health inspectors and vigilant customers. Marrakesh, on the other hand, who's business during the night is hookahs but also sells lunch during the day has absolutely no chance of fitting the criteria set by the law to legally operate as long as it keeps its hookah business.Perhaps the health inspector would have to stop by every day, perhaps the county could just preemptively send them a bill for all the days in the month. The city could hypothetically turn a blind eye, but if they don't all hookah bars are done for.[Edited on May 15, 2009 at 3:48 PM. Reason : ]
5/15/2009 3:43:45 PM
The law also allows localities to create more strict laws, and I'm sure a health inspector could use repeated offenses as an excuse to shut down an establishment. I'm sure that, for a while, lots of bars will skirt this. However, smoking is banned in tons of places, and I can tell you that I went into tons of bars in NYC without even seeing a lit cigarette inside. This will happen here eventually, too.
5/15/2009 3:52:28 PM
5/15/2009 3:57:29 PM
5/15/2009 4:21:08 PM
5/15/2009 5:01:49 PM
5/15/2009 5:07:42 PM
I agree HUR, but apparently the majority of the state house and senate don't
5/15/2009 5:09:17 PM
He needs to sue under Article I, Section I of the State Constitution and establish that this law denies him the fruits of his labor.
5/15/2009 5:31:33 PM
When these businesses obtained their business licenses and their ABC Commission Permits, there was no law regarding smoking. In my opinion, by passing this law, the state is in breach of contract with the business owners, and the owners have the right to be grandfathered above the law.The only way to stop government from invading personal liberties, is to vote them out.
5/15/2009 6:12:17 PM
I understand the outrage at all the smoking bans, but I have to go ahead and declare this a lost battle for the libertarians.The push for smoking ban legislation here, and other places, was partially fueled by what they probably perceived as a success in places like NYC. And empirically, it probably does seem so. If you were a non-smoker patron of bars in a place where smoking bans were implemented, the quality of the bars probably seemed to improve. Now, a fraction of business owners and almost all smokers will tell a different story, but let's face the fact that they're the minority. And when you consider smoking rates in America are under 20% for adults (though i'm sure higher for bar customers), how many people really experienced a detrimental effect (the smokers) versus a positive effect (the 2nd hand smokers) due to the ban?The focus on freedom is mostly directed towards business owners, but you have to take into account the liberties of all parties involved. That is the freedom to smoke, the freedom to enjoy a smoke-free environment, and the freedom to provide either in a business. The previous state of society was that 80% of people didn't smoke and the majority of those would have preferred a smoke-free bar environment, yet the free market failed to provide this. I'd say something like 98% of bars around here are not smoke-free. That doesn't make sense.I would like to take the libertarian free market standpoint, but I don't find it tenable. I have no example of a place that allowed businesses to choose smoking/smoke-free and had a boom in smoke-free places (we'll say 30% for my criteria), which should be the 'efficient market' solution. It simply won't happen in the perfect free market world because no one wants to be that bar that bans smoking when few other places in town are doing it. The reality is that it is easier to light up a cigarette than it is to tell someone to put it out, and that skews the behavior of the market and changes the personal and business freedom argument. Bars have complained about being forced to enforce smoking bans for this reason. It costs more money and alienates customers to tell a them to not do something, but it's worse when all other bars allow it.If half of the bars in town were non-smoking, then I think it's likely you would have a marginal benefit by going non-smoking. After all, the vast majority of people are non-smokers. But with almost all bars being smoking, there is a strong negative detriment. That is a market stalemate and the government needed to do something to change the culture and fix that. The government does have to stand up for the people who don't feel comfortable standing up for themselves. Bar patrons should have asked owners to ban smoking b/c they didn't like it. But they didn't, b/c it's the status quo and it's hard to question it.Now, I'm not defending smoking ban legislation. Going from almost everywhere allowing smoking to 0% allowing smoking is just plain stupid and as inefficient as what we already had, if not more. But that doesn't change that fact that the status quo isn't okay either.If I ran the world, I'd pass legislation that let all bars with some kind of smoking thing in their name have smoking. Like "Mike's Smoking Bar", or "The Cancer Box". And if it's that important to your clientele, then you can just change your name. No one can complain about not knowing what they're getting into, and allowing smoking is proactive.\my 2 cents
5/15/2009 6:51:43 PM
HOOKAH BARS PWNT. STAY HOME.I support the ban though I don't agree with government stepping in and telling people how to live their lives. But oh well, I will let it slide.
5/15/2009 6:56:00 PM
we know about 20% of the population smokes and about 80% of the population doesn't smoke...however..what percentage of people who go to drink at bars smoke? i'd be willing to bet it was more than 20%lots of people who are worried about their health enough to not smoke also don't bother to go out to bars and poison their livers with alcohol in the first placegranted they want to be able to go out to eat food though, and i have zero problem with banning it in restaurants that happen to have bars, but i think bars that happen to serve food should be handled differentlyi know of a restaurant/bar in charlotte that doesn't allow smoking until after 10pm...most people who are there after 10pm arent simply eating dinner, they're at the bar drinking...if you can manage to eat your dinner before 10pm you wont be subjected to smoking, should you choose to go to this place
5/15/2009 7:18:36 PM
The Restaurants and Bars in D.C. were worried when they banned smoking but it has't had an effect at all at least for them.
5/15/2009 8:04:04 PM
5/15/2009 8:33:22 PM
it is my RIGHT to get a job at a hooka bar and not have to inhale second hand smoke.
5/15/2009 9:42:43 PM
I used to go to hookah bars quite frequently, but haven't in a while because -- like booze bars -- they cost too much more than just doing it at home. And I'm not much of a libertarian and my disdain for that crowd is well-documented in this forum, but on this I have to agree with them. Business should have the choice. If people that claimed to care about smoke acted on that claim much at all, then many more businesses would be nonsmoking only. The majority of people don't smoke. They have the market influence to push things in their favor in most places. Legislation is not needed. Their selective patronage of nonsmoking establishments is.But no, I suppose it's far better to shut down establishments that exist expressly and solely for the purpose of smoking.[Edited on May 15, 2009 at 10:37 PM. Reason : forgot an "m," probably more]
5/15/2009 10:36:51 PM
5/16/2009 12:17:37 PM
5/16/2009 2:43:08 PM
damn Shaggy, learn how to fucking spell.
5/16/2009 3:08:04 PM
I just don't understand what the issue is about if i open a 'Vice' Private business that functions as bar (place where people go to poison their livers not eat) as its primary business model why the gov't forces me to ban use of a legal product i.e cigarettes.
5/16/2009 4:12:19 PM
5/16/2009 4:30:28 PM
5/16/2009 4:37:09 PM
Great solutions but its too late for that. The bill has been passed and if the governor hasn't already signed off on it, she will soon. The only thing they can do now is make back-door amendments on other (and most likely non-related) bills such as exempting hookah establishments or permit regulation or something else of the sort.
5/17/2009 7:44:01 AM
5/17/2009 11:04:21 AM
What about the ban on smoking within 30 ft of university buildings. Liberals probably hope smokers stand in teh street and get nailed by the wolf line bus. "Sensitive" students no longer have to worry about their Manginas swiveling up at the slightest hint of cigarette smoke whose concentration probably pale in comparison to other toxic pollutants they inhale on the street.
5/17/2009 5:56:45 PM
i didnt read anything, but the law should allow damn hookah bars. use some common sense. you are not going to work or go to a hookah bar if you hate smoke. And staff who hate smoke have plenty of other places to work
5/17/2009 6:25:46 PM
I bet most of the people who voted on this bill have no idea what hookah is.
5/18/2009 10:13:24 PM
5/19/2009 7:39:28 AM
Gov. Perdue is expected to sign the bill today.[Edited on May 19, 2009 at 8:53 AM. Reason : verbage]
5/19/2009 8:52:45 AM
here's another hookah thread for you guys to "hash" out your arguments
6/2/2009 11:45:24 AM
^ LOL! *Cough*
6/2/2009 11:47:36 AM
http://apps.facebook.com/causes/296302/70176?m=9dc74a6e
6/11/2009 3:10:23 PM
I might of forgotten this, but doesn't smoking kill?
6/16/2009 1:15:13 AM
Hooksaw exposed?
6/16/2009 1:18:40 AM