WHEREAS, the increasing proliferation of liquor licensed
establishments, to wit bars, clubs, lounges and restaurants, within Community
Board 3 is apparent and well documented; and
WHEREAS, the increase in nighttime venues has resulted
in persistent and numerous complaints regarding increased noise as well as
increased pedestrian and vehicular traffic, and said complaints have evolved
over time from complaints that were once only about specific rowdy businesses to
complaints that are now about noise and congestion resulting from the sheer
volume of liquor licensed establishments; and
WHEREAS, the prior moratoria imposed by Community Board
3 at the request of community residents, for 12 St. Mark’s Place, St. Mark’s
Place between First Avenue and Avenue A, Sixth Street between Avenue A and
Avenue B, Avenue A between Houston Street and Fourteenth Street, Ludlow Street
between Houston Street and Stanton Street and Clinton Street between Houston
Street and Rivington Street, had proven an inadequate means of communicating to
the New York State Liquor Authority the deteriorating and deleterious conditions
for residents because of licensed establishments operating within said
locations; and
WHEREAS, Community Board 3 is now comprised of these and
additional geographic areas where the vast number of liquor licensed
establishments operating within those areas has greatly diminished the quality
of life of New York State residents within Community Board 3, said areas being
as follows:
-
[ 99 - 192 ] Ludlow Street between Houston Street and Delancey Street,
which currently has TWENTY-ONE (21) liquor licenses;
-
[ 85 - 138 ] St. Marks Place between First Avenue and Avenue A,
which currently has EIGHTEEN (18) liquor licenses;
-
12 St. Marks Place, for which there have been persistent community complaints
throughout its history as a licensed establishment;
-
[ 1 - 73 ] Clinton Street between Houston Street and Rivington Street,
which currently has SEVENTEEN (17) liquor licenses;
-
[ 500 - 599 ] Sixth Street between Avenue A and Avenue B, which currently has SEVEN (7) liquor
licenses, FIVE (5) of which are adjacent;
-
Avenue A between Houston Street and Fourteenth Street,
which currently has FIFTY-SIX (56) liquor licenses;
-
[ 85 - 130 ] Rivington Street between Norfolk Street and
Orchard Street, which currently has ELEVEN (11) liquor licenses, including one
(1) hotel license which contains a lounge, a club and a 5,000 square foot restaurant, all
of which is open to the public;
-
Avenue C between Houston Street and Fourteenth Street,
which currently has TWENTY-THREE (23) liquor licenses;
-
[ 10 - 31 ] First Avenue between First Street and
Second Street, which currently has EIGHT (8) liquor licenses and has been publicized as one
of the noisiest blocks in the City;
-
[ 144 - 202 ] Orchard Street between Houston Street and Rivington Street,
which currently has ELEVEN (11) liquor licenses;
-
[ 1 - 37 ] St. Mark’s Place between Second Avenue
and Third Avenue, which currently has TWENTY-TWO (22) liquor licenses and
which has been the subject of the New York Police Department’s
Model Block Initiative because of nightlife problems;
-
[ 183 - 242 ] Fourth Street between Avenue A and Avenue B,
which currently has SEVEN (7) liquor licenses;
-
[ 27 - 74 ] First Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue, which
currently has EIGHT (8) liquor licenses; and
-
Avenue B between Houston Street and Fourteenth Street, which
currently has FORTY-TWO (42) liquor licenses; and
WHEREAS, Community Board 3 recognizes that residents
from all of the aforementioned areas have continuously complained about noise
from patrons on the street in front of licensed establishments, in the backyards
of licensed establishments, traveling between licensed establishments and
emanating from the businesses themselves, as well as from taxis and limousines
dropping off and picking up people patronizing these establishments; and
THAT, the local police precincts have enlarged their
cabaret and quality of life units in an effort to address the overwhelming
pedestrian and vehicular noise conditions that have resulted from the licensing
of so many establishments within such close proximity to each other on
relatively narrow streets and avenues, and have begun to coordinate services
with the Department of Transportation, Department of Sanitation, Department of
Environmental Protection, Department of Buildings, the New York Fire Department,
and the enforcement division of the Taxi and Limousine Commission, have asked
the Department of Transportation to eliminate nighttime weekend parking on
Avenue B between Houston and 4th Streets, Ludlow Street between Houston and
Delancey Streets and Orchard Street between Houston and Rivington Streets, and
have instituted numerous operations to control said conditions on Avenue A,
Avenue B, Second Avenue, Ludlow Street and Orchard Street; and
THAT, Community Board 3 believes that prospective
applicants for new licenses and upgrades of existing licenses within the
aforementioned areas should have sufficient notice that their applications will
be denied because of the quality of life and safety conditions that exist
because of the present number of licensed establishments within said areas, and
that said notice is made to prevent any prospective applicant from loss of
investment of monies with respect to any given location; and
WHEREAS, while Community Board 3 believes that the
aforementioned conditions are a substantial basis for the disapproval of
additional liquor licenses within the stated areas, it understands that the New
York State Liquor Authority requires information specific to individual
applicants, as well as information about their attendant areas and quality of
life concerns prevalent in those areas, in order to give serious consideration
to the recommendations of this or any community board;
THEREFORE, be it resolved that Community Board 3
continues to encourage the New York State Liquor Authority to credit the
personal, historic and geographic experience of Community Board 3 and its
residents, when describing the detrimental effects of continuing to grant
licenses within said Community Board 3 areas, as well as documented quality of
life concerns or regulatory or other issues about those areas or specific
locations; and
FURTHER, Community Board 3 asks that the New York State
Liquor Authority deny new licenses in these areas where the existing number of
operating licensed establishments within five hundred (500) feet exceeds three
(3), where there is little benefit, economic or otherwise, to the public and
where the increasingly deleterious effects of existing licensed nighttime
businesses on the quality of life of New York State residents living within
those areas, far outweighs any benefit obtained from the addition of one (1)
more license; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that Community Board 3 will hear
in committee any new liquor license application, regardless of class, or any
application for an upgrade in license class or any alteration application which
would result in the physical expansion of an existing business, within any of
the aforementioned areas, and consider any and application materials in order to
provide supporting information for each of its recommendations; and
FURTHER, that consistent with above-described history
within those areas, Community Board 3 will approve applications within said
areas only where the applicant can demonstrate public benefit or substantial
support from the surrounding community; and
FURTHER, should said resolution be repealed at some
future date, any and all preexisting moratoria will be automatically reinstated
with notice of ninety (90) days to each block association
affected.