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ONE YEAR LATER: How have area businesses fared since the smoking ban?

Filed by NorthCoastNOW April 27th, 2008 in Top Stories.
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On May 5 last year, the statewide smoking ban took effect and extinguished smoking in all indoor public places. The law — passed with 57 percent of the public vote in November 2007 — was hotly contested when it was put on the ballot and divided people into several camps.

Some felt that the ban unconstitutionally trampled smokers’ rights. Others felt that the law lacked teeth and didn’t go far enough in assuring that restaurants enforced the ban.

In addition, many business owners feared that the ban would slowly kill their business.

So how does it look a year after the smoke has cleared?

Most of the fears around the ban have been realized. Revenue at restaurants, especially those that rely heavily on alcohol sales, have dwindled, sometimes fatally. The loss, though, has been distributed unevenly, with some restaurants reporting 80 percent decreases and others witnessing a bump in revenue.

Some businesses have deliberately disregarded the ban and allow smokers to puff away as though nothing has changed — accruing complaints, citations and fines along the way.

Other restaurants have accepted the ban and found creative ways to keep their businesses afloat.

But any way you slice it, the smoking ban has affected more than people’s lungs.

Restaurant losses

For many restaurants, ridding their premises of smoke has sometimes meant an exodus of smokers, as well. With times already tight, these losses have often been an unbearable burden.

Twenty-three percent of restaurants surveyed across the state said that they could be out of business by the end of the year, according to Mark Glasper, director of communications for the Ohio Restaurant Association. And although other factors have likely contributed, such as increases in minimum wage and in the cost of food and fuel, the smoking ban is surely a large culprit, Glasper said.

“Restaurants are seeing less business,” he said. “I’ve heard from many that the loss of smoking business has significantly cut into their profits.”

Frank DeTillio, president of the Lorain County Chamber of Commerce, said that he’s heard from many local businesses reporting revenue drops between 30 and 40 percent. He’s also heard, though, of restaurants that have benefited from the ban.

“It seems that the ones that are down are the bars — the ones that don’t serve food,” he said.

While larger restaurants or chains can absorb the impact of the smoking ban and ultimately adjust and bounce back, smaller restaurants are finding the losses less easily repaired.

Restaurants such as Boomer’s and Hazel’s in Elyria have seen portions of their revenue leave with the smoke.

For restaurants like these, the safety net is a lot more brittle than for larger chains, and they often find themselves in a delicate situation.

In an effort to provide these businesses with more options, the Ohio Licensed Beverage Association is actively seeking to repeal the ban for family owned businesses, according to its vice president Jacob Evans.

“It’s really been damaging for places that don’t have the capacity to withstand a hit like that,” Evans said.

Evans said he’s been flooded with calls and letters from small businesses searching for help to stay afloat.

“I haven’t heard from one person that business has been up,” he said.

But in Lorain County, at least, there are some good signs. Business for many is rebounding slightly. After the initial impact of the ban, effects have been consistently diminishing over the year, according to some.

At Quick and Delicious in Oberlin, the smoking ban and a new restoration gave the restaurant a new beginning.

“A lot of our customers are senior citizens, and they don’t want the smoke anyway,” manager Shirley Owens said.

Profits have rebounded, and the business has evolved.

Similarly, after seeing business drop by more than a quarter last summer, Ziggy’s Bar and Grill in Amherst has completely recovered, according to manager Paul Baraniak.

“We’ve probably lost some regulars,” he said. “But we’ve completely rebounded. I still wish they’d repeal it, but it’s definitely better than last year.”

Creative solutions

As at Quick and Delicious and Ziggy’s Bar and Grill, the smoking ban has caused some businesses to revise their business plan. Sometimes this has meant shifting the focus to food, more specials, or offering outdoor patios and bars to attract exiled smokers.

Church Street Bar & Grille in Amherst saw a large dip in sales after the ban took effect. But by constructing an outdoor patio last September, Church Street might have saved its business.

And Church Street isn’t the only restaurant that the ban had owners thinking outside the box.

Last year, 1,206 bars and restaurants across Ohio requested permits for outdoor patios, nearly twice as many as were requested in 2006, according to Matt Mullins, spokesman for the Ohio Division of Liquor Control.

“A lot of places are looking for these expansions to help keep their business up,” he said.

But for smoking to be allowed at these outdoor patios, they must comply with standards set by state and local health departments. Partitions must separate them from doors and windows, and they must be at least half open-air, according to Lorain County General Health District’s Commissioner Ken Pearce.

The Health District, which is also responsible for inspections and citations, is happy to advise restaurants on how to build outdoor additions that are up to code.

“We’re not trying to be really nasty about it,” Pearce said.

But the trend toward outdoor smoking facilities rewards businesses with the capital to invest substantially in them.

Quaker Steak and Lube in Sheffield, a chain with 24 locations around the country, had a relatively smooth ride toward accommodating smokers.

Outside the restaurant is a horseshoe-shaped bar that seats about 50 and is fully equipped with televisions, wind-blocking partitions, heating and a pool table.

If the smoke had to be taken out of the bar, Quaker Steak management decided that it might as well bring the bar out to the smokers.

Benefits to workers

All of these results were unintended consequences of a ban so wide in scope. But what about the changes the ban actually intended to inspire?

In this respect, the ban has almost universally accomplished its goal of lessening the potential dangers of secondhand smoke and freeing employees from poisonous environments.

Unanimously, servers sang the praises of a smoke-free workplace. Citing colds that didn’t linger like they once did and clothes that didn’t reek of tobacco, employees found that work was a more enjoyable and healthier place to be.

Fears that the ban would dip into employees’ tips,  either due to shorter stays or less-generous moods, seem to have largely been overestimated.

“Sales might have dropped a little, but my tips pretty much stayed the same,” said Scott Richter, a bartender at the Oberlin Inn.

And he said there was an unexpected bonus from the ban. Smokers tend to head for the overhang by the door in clusters, allowing him a brief intermission.

“I can dip into the bathroom for a second, which is nice,” he said.

An employee at Scorcher’s in Lorain, who wished not to be named, said that the ban has made his job a little easier. The necessity to clean walls and ashtrays, once a regular event, has been removed from his job description.

Pearce, at the Health District, said that although there won’t be an immediately visible effect in terms of public health, it is indisputably beneficial.

“It’s more of a preventative issue,” he said. “Lungs will recover, asthma will reduce.”

He’s also seen data to suggest that there’s already been a decline in sudden heart attacks among other areas that have banned smoking.

“This is the single most important decision the public has made in my career,” Pearce said. “The career is now worthwhile.”

Enforcement woes

Of course, banning smoking in all public places is one thing, enforcing  the ban is quite another.

The three local health departments — Lorain County and the cities of Lorain and Elyria — are responsible for enforcing the ban, although without extra money or staff, this can seem like a fool’s errand.

In fact, so many establishments have completely ignored the ban and publicly flouted it, that Pearce has sent a letter to Columbus requesting the fines be doubled.

The fines range from $100 for a first offense to $2,500 for a fourth, but the process for citing an offender is complicated and often tangled in red tape. The

Health Department must receive a complaint, plan an investigation and actually see someone smoking indoors before they can issue a citation.

And, due to arcane rules and regulations, it is often difficult — if not impossible — to catch someone in the act.

In social clubs, the inspector must be buzzed in before entering, which gives smokers ample time to put out their butts and cover ash trays with towels, which health inspectors are legally forbidden to move, according to Pearce.

“It makes our job very difficult,” he said.

And it allows businesses to permit smoking much of the time without being regularly punished.

The Lorain County General Health Department, for example, received 635 complaints. That resulted in 276 investigations, 23 warnings, six first fines and three second fines.

The low number of fines provides little disincentive for businesses to covertly — or even openly — allow patrons to light up. This, in turn, unduly punishes those establishments that comply with the law.

“We are at a point where some groups are intentionally allowing smoking,” Pearce said. “These clubs are illegally stealing business from other establishments. It’s an unfair class, an unfair business practice.”

He’s heard of clubs that turn a blind eye or even have a bucket where smokers can sporadically drop a buck to cover potential fines.

The infrequency of fines has given some of these businesses confidence in their decision to disobey the law. Reports of clubs intimidating or banning members who have complained about smoking, isn’t uncommon, Pearce said. And even Health Department workers aren’t exempt from intimidation.

“I had an inspector walk into one of these social clubs, and an officer walked up to her and shoved a cigarette right up to her nose,” Pearce said. “This was a woman — a pregnant woman — just trying to do her job.”

Aside from direct intimidation, businesses are seeking other creative ways of allowing smoking.

“Places are permitting smoking during health department off hours,” said Jack Kurowski, director of environmental Health for the Lorain City Health Department.

To combat this, the Health Department is going to start assigning workers to night and weekend shifts. However, Kurowski said that the complaints have been dwindling as of late and are often directed at the same few facilities.

Contact Michael Baker at 329-7128 or mbaker@chroniclet.com.



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61 Responses to “ONE YEAR LATER: How have area businesses fared since the smoking ban?”

  1. George says:

    Tiamj said it better than anyone could have. Thank you.

    I think those that insist on smoking around others, risking the health of others, are selfish people. I would never participate in any behavior that was not only offensive to those around me, but harmful to their health. Regardless of the law, it is absolutely rude. It doesn’t matter what the activity is, smoking, playing with mercury, driving drunk; it is offensive and rude, and selfish.

    No rights are being taken away from smokers. No one has told anyone they can’t smoke. The law, which was passed by the voters of this state, only protects those who don’t smoke, more specifically protecting workers from being forced to work in smoke filled environments, from the clear and present hazards of second hand smoke.

    Finally: “REPUBLIC: A commonwealth; that form of government in which the administration of affairs is open to all the citizens.” Black’s Law Dictionary, Sixth Edition.
    So, since groups of concerned citizens got the issue on the ballot, and citizen voters passed the initiative, the law was passed. The enactment of this law fits the VERY DEFINITION of the word REPUBLIC.

    It is amazing to me how people throw around words, like republic, constitution, and rights, and don’t know even the most basic definition of the word, let alone how they apply to our form of government and laws. It is great, though, that in our Republic, our Constitution clearly gives us the Right to voice our opinions, regardless of the ignorance of flawed logic of those who opine!

    (Report comment)

  2. aterryw says:

    The ones who seem to do the most complaining on the ban… is the non-smokers… again if you don’t smoke don’t go to places that allow it. Simple! I’m not Catholic, and I don’t go to Mass and moan and groan about not having a Pastor instead of a Priest…..

    (Report comment)

  3. auntmaryjo says:

    aterryw: You are missing the point completely. NO PLACE is permitted to “allow” smoking inside on their premises. To do so is against the law! Very simple concept to understand. However, people who think they are above the law, choose to ignore it and tell those who expect compliance to “stay away”. You have no right to tell law abiding people to stay away so you can continue to break the law. Period.

    (Report comment)

  4. aterryw says:

    tiamj…. lol…. I’m not breaking the law, just think the law was passed without full support, and the police have better things to do than scan bars.

    I see nothing wrong with charging a SMOKE fee of say $200 if the restaurant/bar has the latest in air filtration systems, for those who have not outside smoking pits.

    If they don’t then charge $2000 per year to let people who are not willing to go to the balcony.

    Once the fee is paid a Window sticker is given to place in the entrance or the door to inform those who don’t smoke that this establishment allows smoking in certain areas. Then it would be up to those who enter if they wish to stay. This would additional tax dollars to support the health department, to use in an effort to squelch those who smoke who need help in quitting the addiction.

    Most smokers I know are very polite when you ask them to not to light up, course there are the self-centered ones, but hey there are self-centered non-smokers too.

    (Report comment)

  5. eld25 says:

    aterryw nice try, but how about having smokers go outside to eliminate all the smoke from eating areas. I think most places can afford to have outside smoking pits, I mean ashtrays. Instead of the tax money in your idea going to the health dept. to help people quit, maybe the law making them smoke outside will.

    (Report comment)

  6. aterryw says:

    eld25…. lol… lol…. lol…. I’m sure if you drink, you’d quit if you had to take you alcohol out side to drink? Right? don’t think so…. Raising money by tax to be used for education to quit since nicotine is the strongest additction and then use the money to assist with those who have breathing issues and to keep the next generation from starting… but hey….just an idea

    (Report comment)

  7. JSKovacs says:

    I would like you to back up that claim, because from what I can see, you are making blatantly incorrect claims here.

    http://www.usconstitution.net/const.html Please, find something that backs up your statement, because I cannot.

    No, I’m sorry lagranger, that’s not just how it works. Perhaps in your small, self-centered world it does, but not in real life. Your rights NEVER overshadow the rights of another individual

    The Constitution is a set of rules upon which every person is afforded *equal* rights. You militant non-smokers seem oblivious to that.

    Another point most of you are missing is the fact that eventually laws can or will be passed that infringe upon what you consider to be your lawful rights The proverbial “give them and inch and they’ll take a mile”. How much longer until someone tries to make *their* family values *your* family values? Sound good? I didn’t think so. Think before you start spouting your “high and mighty” proverbs.

    (Report comment)

  8. eld25 says:

    aterryw, actually I probably would cut back if I had to drink outside, but me drinking a beer isn’t harming the other customers health. The thing is, unless you’ve lived in a cave for the last 30 years you already know how bad smoking is for your health. The law passed. Everyone needs to accept it whether you agree with it or not. Move on with your lives.

    (Report comment)

  9. SeanH says:

    In America we have one of the best freedoms of all, the freedom to vote. This allows the majority to pass laws that affect everyone. The majority of people that voted in Ohio are against smoking. That is the reason we have the current no smoking law.

    One thing that really disappoints me in reading articles like this one is they leave out major facts. When NY went no smoking the economy was strong and growing. New York restaurants and Bars business went up after then no smoking laws. This non smoking law went into effect during a failing economy. During a bad economy restaurants and bars take a big hit. That is what is happening now.

    If you own a restaurant or bar and business is down maybe you need to make improvements. Maybe your service is sub par. Maybe your food is sub par. Maybe your menu is over priced. Do not cop out and blame the non smoking laws that the major of the people that live in Ohio that vote for. There are many restaurants and bars in Lorain County that are doing well.

    SeanH

    (Report comment)

  10. Blade says:

    Redhed,
    I enjoyed reading your comments because they were truthfull, articulate,and made sense. It is amazing how some people would just dismiss your points and then go on to something else like your points meant nothing. But you have to realize that you are dealing with addicts here, who do not care about how others are affected. I sit back and watch these people sometimes and it is amazing how this little cancer stick dictates their lives. I especially like it in the winter time when a goup of them are freezing and huddled around together smoking…how sad how they are controlled.

    ConcernedMom,
    I hope you stick to your word about not posting again because quite frankly, you always seem to miss the point and you are boring.

    (Report comment)

  11. George says:

    JSKovacs:

    You are wrong about a person’s rights never being overshadowed by another’s. There are several examples constitutionally when this occurs. I will list only a few.

    First, your freedom of speech does not allow you to yell “Fire!” in a crowded theater, causing panic and false alarm. Second, your right to life is out the window if you are threatening another person; a person may take your life in self-defense. Third, your right to keep and bear arms is limited by every gun control law passed, and most people, even the strongest supporters of the Second Amendment, agree that a psychiatric background check should be completed prior to gun ownership. Fourth, your right against self-incrimination, your Miranda rights, may not count in the instance of public safety, like if police question you about the location of a gun used in a crime prior to Miranda warnings being given, if their intent is to recover the gun to keep the community safe. Your right to warrantless search of your home is not absolute either; in cases of exigency or “hot pursuit” or the possibility of destruction of evidence, or the health or welfare of the occupants of the home, police, firefighters, paramedics, etc. may enter your home without a warrant.

    As you can see, there are many examples where one person’s rights are overshadowed by another’s. Further, can you see a common theme amongst those examples? In each case, the rights of one person are curtailed for the good or protection of others. In this case, the public smoking ban, it is the same thing (even though a “right” to smoke has NEVER been Constitutionally or legislatively established). So, one’s right to smoke is not as important as another’s, or group of people’s, right to live, eat, shop, or do business in a smoke filled environment that has been proven hazardous to their health.

    (Report comment)

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