threeplusfire: (bring it on)
three ([personal profile] threeplusfire) wrote2003-06-06 01:18 am

I will smoke just to be spiteful now

I would just like to give a big hearty FUCK YOU to the City Council of Austin for passing a smoking ordinance that will ban smoking everywhere except pool halls. Pool halls? What the fuck?

Don't fucking legislate my perfectly legal self destructive behaviour thank you very much. And expect some hateful furious emails tomorrow Council people. I'm out for blood.

How long til Metro gets a pool table I wonder?

[identity profile] sammka.livejournal.com 2003-06-06 04:05 pm (UTC)(link)
Couldn't the problem of smoking in clubs be handled by the private sector? Lots of clubs in DC have two floors, smoking and non-smoking. The ones with the bands are non-smoking, not just because the smoking bothers non-smokers, but because lighted cigarettes in crowded areas can burn people, and because the bands like it better. The smokers don't seem to mind, since they can always just go up or down a floor and catch a quick smoke. Shows don't last that long, so most can wait until a break in the live music.

Overall, this is a pretty good solution, and since it's a private establishment its choices don't create that much controversy, because, as the thinking goes, if you don't like it you can just start your own club and make your own rules.

[identity profile] puella.livejournal.com 2003-06-06 05:05 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, that sounds like a great solution to me. There would still be some law changes though, stating that you need to establish seperate rooms/floors for smokers and nonsmokers. The clubs aren't going to do it on their own for fear of losing business.

Re:

[identity profile] sammka.livejournal.com 2003-06-06 05:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Why would they be afraid of losing business? The smokers aren't terribly bothered, and the non-smokers are more likely to go to a club that's not filled with smoke. I can't imagine them losing business.

In fact, the whole point of that example was that it was something you could get a club to do on its own, without legislation. Get enough people to petition a club to adopt that policy, and say that a lot of people don't go to the club because they can't stand the smoke, and the club will most likely make the change on its own. Just like a lot of restaurants voluntary make smoking/non-smoking sections.

[identity profile] puella.livejournal.com 2003-06-06 05:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Well I said they would be afraid of losing business because all of the clubs and bars here in Austin were very against the no-smoking policy because they said they would lose business. Also because no clubs have actually done that yet, because it's a big hassle and they don't have to and people will come anyway.

I agree that it seems like it wouldn't make them lose business. It seems to me like they wouldn't. I just think the clubs won't do it unless they have to.

Re:

[identity profile] sammka.livejournal.com 2003-06-06 05:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Of course a strict no-smoking policy will make them lose business. Non-smokers don't want to go somewhere that will make them go outside to smoke. The thing I was talking about is not a strict non-smoking policy, it's a compromise that doesn't seem to hurt their business at all.

I think the 'people will come anyway' theory depends on the region as a whole. Sure, there will be some people in every place that don't mind clouds of smoke, and some clubs cater specifically to those crowds. But other clubs know their clientele wants separate floors, and they make the move to accommodate them.

Look, clubs are businesses. If they have any serious reason to think a lot of people aren't coming to their club because it doesn't have a two-floors policy, they'll institute a two-floors policy. They're not going to need legislation in order to do something that will get them more business. And if one club owner is stupid enough not to adopt that policy, some other club owner will adopt it, and take all that business away from the first one. That's how the free market works.

Re:

[identity profile] sammka.livejournal.com 2003-06-06 06:03 pm (UTC)(link)
By the way, there don't seem to be any DC laws forcing clubs to have separate non-smoking and smoking floors, since I just remembered one that doesn't. So there must not be any such legislation. But the Black Cat, as I remember, does have the two-floors policy. So I feel pretty safe thinking that was just an idea they came up on their own, that happened to work out.