(no subject)
After long delay, Philadelphia city council suddenly passes smoking ban legislation
I practically jumped out of bed when I heard the news. Finally! Assuming the mayor signs the bill (and smart money is that he will), then starting in 2007 I'll be able to go out with my friends without feeling sick for the rest of the day! Congrats to city council for doing the right thing, and congrats to Michael Nutter for finally getting this through, and probably earning a few thousand votes for mayor at the same time.
I know some of you disagree with this, or think it makes me a bad liberal or something. And you're probably right, but dammit, I just want to be able to go out at night without spending the whole time counting the minutes until I can jump in the shower. I don't think that's too much to ask.
I practically jumped out of bed when I heard the news. Finally! Assuming the mayor signs the bill (and smart money is that he will), then starting in 2007 I'll be able to go out with my friends without feeling sick for the rest of the day! Congrats to city council for doing the right thing, and congrats to Michael Nutter for finally getting this through, and probably earning a few thousand votes for mayor at the same time.
I know some of you disagree with this, or think it makes me a bad liberal or something. And you're probably right, but dammit, I just want to be able to go out at night without spending the whole time counting the minutes until I can jump in the shower. I don't think that's too much to ask.

no subject
With regard to the "neighborhood bars" thing: "The exemptions are available for bars that make at least 90 percent of their revenue from the sale of alcohol. In 2005, according to the Liquor Control Board, about 1,500 of the city's 1,950 licensed establishments had Sunday-sales permits, which require bars to earn more than 30 percent of their income from selling food or nonalcoholic drinks. None of those, then, would be eligible for exemptions." So I really don't think this provision will have that big of an impact. It certainly shouldn't exempt venues that sell tickets to hear music, since they must make at least 10% on ticket sales alone.
no subject
"less than 10 percent of the total revenue comes from the sale of food"
Nothing about non-alcoholic beverages or tickets. I guess we will have to wait and see
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I wonder how much of the TLA's revenue is from food. Or Tin Angel's.
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no subject
Oh and thanks for that "Sunday-sales" info. I was wondering just how many bars would be able to be exempt.
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Even if you're not taking the Sunday Sales Law into account, it would seem likely that the sale of non-alcoholic drinks would be insignificantly small compared to food sales, no matter what, so leaving them out of the equation or putting them in doesn't seem to make much of a difference in my opinion.
From my reading, both the Sunday Sales Law and the new Smoking Law specifically talk about profits from food and drinks *only*. Ticket sales or non-consumable sales don't seem to get factored into the equation one way or the other.
no subject