Posted on 08/17/2003 11:04:26 PM PDT by Ronin
EDMONTON - A "sober bar" that caters to recovering alcoholics was told Thursday to get a liquor licence and start serving alcohol if it wants to let customers smoke.
A city bylaw inspector's warning creates a painful Catch-22 for the owners of north-side Keep it Simple club. If they stay dry and ban smoking, they say they'll lose 90 per cent of their business.
If they start selling liquor, they'll be tempting many patrons to return to addiction.
"The city is forcing us to promote alcohol as the only way we can keep smoking," co-owner Tom Charbonneau said. "Other restaurants and bars have that option, but we don't."
Charbonneau and Lawrence Lathe opened Keep It Simple two years ago to give recovering alcoholics, gambling or drug addicts a bar-like atmosphere without the booze they have to shun. They also hold meetings for Alcoholics Anonymous, Cocaine Anonymous and other 12-step programs in a back room.
Most former addicts smoke; it gives them at least one vice, Charbonneau said.
A bylaw inspector visited the club Thursday, for the first time since the July 1 start of Edmonton's anti-smoking bylaw, which only allows smoking in bars with a minors-prohibited liquor licence.
She let Charbonneau and fellow co-owner Lawrence Lathe off with a warning, but they'd need to get a licence to continue to allow smoking.
However, the Alberta Gaming and Liquor Commission refused to issue them a licence Thursday, because they weren't planning to actually sell liquor.
"They weren't looking for a liquor licence, they were looking for a smoking licence," said Alberta Gaming spokeswoman Marilyn Carlyle-Helms.
Charbonneau said he plans to ask the city if there is a way to get around the bylaw, without having to bring in alcohol.
"If they say I have to serve a 12-pack, I will buy a 12-pack of beer, sell it for $5 a can, call all the media, stand in front of our sober club and pour it all out on the ground, just to show them how ridiculous it is," Charbonneau said.
A city official said the rules are clear on the bylaw, and the owners knew about the restrictions well in advance.
"This is a decision that has affected a number of other establishments in the city," said Mark Garrett, manager of the city's development compliance branch.
Charbonneau had erroneously thought the nightclub would be exempt because it was a members-only facility. His adjacent Keep It Simple coffee shop went non-smoking on July 1 and has suffered a 30-per-cent drop in business, he said.
The bar has 300 members and Charbonneau said it serves juice, pop and food to 200 people a night.
Bar regular Les Labine sat at a table Thursday, smoking with a friend visiting from Ontario. He's avoided drinking for four months, and would come back less often if the club served alcohol.
"It's part of the recovery process to avoid a bar," he said.
And a smoking ban would also turn Labine away. He's not sure where he'd go, he said.
Charbonneau fears many avid smokers would start visiting the very liquor bars where their addictions began. Keep It Simple has been their refuge.
"This has been a mainstay in the recovery community."
jmarkusoff@thejournal.canwest.com
© Copyright 2003 Edmonton Journal
Five dollars says that this 12 step group isnt welcome.
Good luck with your endeavor.
After a person overcomes that habit, most other challenges in life become easy by comparison.
What a crock. And at a private club no less.
Reminds me of Mike Snyder's joke on the opry sunday night. This old boy goes in a bar and tells the bar tender to give him 5 shots of the best scotch he has.
The bar tender turns and points to a bottle on the far wall and says, " That's it over there. It's 35 dollars per shot, you sure you want that?"
The old boy says, "I don't care, just pour me 5 shots."
"Ok," says the bar tender; and sets up 5 shot glasses and fills them from the bottle.
The old boy throws down those shots in record time and wipes his mouth.
Bar tender was amazed and said, "I've don't see how anybody could drink 5 shots that fast"
The old boy said, "you could if you've got what I've got."
"What have you got?", ask the bar tender.
"Fifty cents" replied the old boy
I say to hell with a bar that doesn't serve alcohol.
"Oh, I want to go to a bar, but I don't want to drink or watch any football..."
What the hell is that?!!
A bar is a bar. A coffee shop is a coffee shop. What they want is to go to a coffee shop but are too embarassed to call it that so they want to call it a "Bar".
they'd need to get a licence to continue to allow smoking.
I think that sentence pretty much answers your question......revenues, revenues and more revenues to support the state. The "state" has long since forgotten about the people. Canada is now a dehydrated old sow with all its teats intact and attached to them all are obsolete, proven government failures.
The western provinces need to secede from Vancouver and the rest of the socialist republic of kanada.........
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.