The State Senate has passed a bill to add  requirements to the liquor licensing process. It's a mixed bag, and  reason for concern. The Assembly will consider it next.
If  passed by the State Assembly, the State Liquor Authority would necessarily  consider the public convenience and advantage of the license, and would  necessarily determine that the license is in the public  interest before awarding a license.
So far so good. But the "public interest" is no longer  tied to "the community." So the public interest would  include, for example, state revenue from liquor, or commerce generally  beyond the community's local benefit.
The current law considers the "public interest of the  community." Deleting those three words allows a revenue-starved  government to bypass community concerns. And once a bar strip is  installed, it doesn't disappear when the recession ends and the  government no longer needs its revenue. The strip remains, displacing  local commercial diversity, local services and community character.
Scroll down to see the exact language of the bill. Its first  line is a step advancing towards commercial diversity and  community protection. The last line, unfortunately, voids it.
The law has always had a list of "public convenience and advantage"  clauses, but they were optional considerations. This bill changes the  "public convenience and advantage" clauses from
"may consider any or all"
to
"SHALL  consider ALL"
problems of  noise, traffic, density of bars, among others.
The bill still does not define the public interest, and weakens  it by deleting "of the community." So the public interest loophole  remains in this bill, and now it's even wider.
Almost anything  might be in the public interest. For example, if the bar includes a  toilet, the success of the bar might be in the public interest, since  the public might use the toilet, say, to vomit in, the public having  drunk too much liquor at the bar.
More typically, bars argue that the jobs they create are in the  public interest. Even more pertinently for the State, the SLA might find  that the license renewal fee itself might be in the public interest  since that money goes to the government, and the government by  definition is, of course, the public interest.
It is impracticable to list every instance of  public interest relative to each context. In a depressed neighborhood,  jobs might be in the public interest. But in a blue-collar family  neighborhood near local workplaces, nightlife might not be the optimal  replacement for those local workplaces.
In a recession,  government desperately needs revenue and, since nightlife survives a  recession better  than almost any business, the government may consider liquor licenses  very much desirable as a revenue flow, despite no local community  interest is served.
So this bill is a mixed bag and there's work to be done. Here's the  bill itself. I've highlighted the important changed clauses in red  [brackets in brown are the old law being deleted, UPPER CASE red are new  words]:
 6-a.    The authority [may]  SHALL consider [any or] all of the  following
 in determining whether public convenience and advantage and  the   public
  interest  will  be promoted by the granting of [licenses and permits  for
 the sale of alcoholic beverages at a particular unlicensed   location]  A
 LICENSE PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION:
   (a)  [The]   THE number, classes and character of licenses in proximity
 to the location and in the particular municipality or subdivision  there-
   of[.];
   (b) [Evidence] EVIDENCE that all necessary licenses and   permits  have
 been obtained from the state and all other governing  bodies[.];
   (c)  [Effect]  EFFECT of the grant of the license on  vehicular traffic
    and parking in proximity to the location[.];
   (d) [The] THE  existing noise level at the location and any increase in
 noise  level that would be generated by the proposed premises[.];
   (e)  [The] THE history  of  liquor  violations  and  reported  criminal
    activity at the proposed premises[.]; AND
   (f)  [Any]  ANY   other factors specified by law or regulation that are
 relevant to  determine the public convenience and advantage  [and  public
      interest  of  the  community] AND NECESSARY TO FIND THAT THE  GRANTING OF
 SUCH LICENSE SHALL BE IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST.
City of Yes, Drop Dead
2 months ago
2 comments:
Either you should clarify which bill # your analysis refers to, or you should include ALL of it because there seems to be conflicting information here.
Senate # S5577A which passed by a vote of 59-0 DOES clarify Community in more specific terms.
S3775 Squadron/A7364 Millman, closes a loophole in the 200-foot and 500-foot laws.
In September 2009, S5578 Squadron/A8518 Schimminger was signed into law, clarifying that the State Liquor Authority should not count restaurants, taverns and other nightlife establishments as distinct categories when considering whether the 500-foot law applies.
Below is the text of a release from Sen. Squadron's office of last Wednesday:
For the first time, the bill will require the State Liquor Authority to consider applicants’ history with Community Boards and make consistent the factors that the SLA takes into account for all applications where the 500-foot rule applies. The bill is sponsored by Assembly Member Robin Schimminger in the Assembly. If it becomes law, the bill will create clear, consistent, and enforceable standards that communities and applicants can rely on.
Currently, under the 500-foot law, the State Liquor Authority must hold a public hearing and consider the public interest when deciding whether to grant a liquor license to a new establishment within 500 feet of three existing establishments, but is not required to consider specific standards. Senator Squadron’s bill makes the standards consistent and no longer optional, and adds two factors for consideration: the applicants’ history with Community Boards, as well as fire and building code violations.
Senator Squadron said, “Without knowing what is meant by public benefit, the entire public suffers. This bill makes community engagement more substantive, and encourages a strong working relationship between establishments and neighborhoods. It is another step toward making our nightlife laws clearer and fairer for everyone involved.”
Senator Squadron has passed a series of bills that seek to create clarity and consistency in nightlife laws. Last week, the Senate passed S3775 Squadron/A7364 Millman, which closes a loophole in the 200-foot and 500-foot laws by clarifying that the distance between nightlife establishments and schools or places of worship must be measured from the property line. In September 2009, S5578 Squadron/A8518 Schimminger was signed into law, clarifying that the State Liquor Authority should not count restaurants, taverns and other nightlife establishments as distinct categories when considering whether the 500-foot law applies.
S3775 restricts the 500-foot rule, but doesn't really close a loophole. The language was spread between two sections, allowing confusion that led to abuse. If the SLA had been watchful, it would not have allowed those abuses.
S5578 was a needed correction.
But those are not this S5577A. The only conflict is in the requirements of the first line and the relaxing of them in the last line.
If the first line were "the SLA shall consider all AND ONLY these considerations a-f" there'd be no problem. Or if in the last line "the public interest" were added "as only described above in a-f" there'd be no problem.
But, as I mentioned in the post, it is impracticable to list all and only considerations of the public interest. It varies from community to community, context to context.
That's why I think the solution will have to be in fine-grained zoning of use groups. The ABC laws can only generalize. This is an area that requires community self-determination, and the closest law-making to that is zoning right now.
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