
Dining with bureaucrats
Guess who's coming to dinner? The City of Vancouver's anti-smoking
police, that's who -- and they're not here to sample the entrees.
By Anne MacDiarmid
"Hi, I'm Jeff! I'll be your waiter tonight. Enjoy your dinner, but
remember that I'm required by Vancouver City Council to ensure that
you 'conform to society's norms' while in our establishment. Have
a great evening!"
How many of us would like to be greeted that way at the start of a
quiet dinner in our favourite restaurant? Most of us would find
the approach a little bizarre and more than a little insulting --
except, perhaps, the City Council of Vancouver, B.C. and the city's
Health Board. In the wake of a smoking ban bylaw that went into
effect last month, Vancouver is hounding its hard-working
restaurateurs into accepting the ban -- a restriction that
threatens to ruin businesses; to maim or kill many enjoyable,
well-established restaurants that have graced this community for years.
It's hardly surprising that restaurateurs haven't been keen on this
bylaw, and the city knows it well. In an effort to head off a
groundswell of non-compliance, the Health Board's Environmental
Health Division has sent out a circular "explaining" the bylaw
to affected businesses -- a communication which can only be described
as a masterpiece of the iron-fist-in-a-velvet-glove school of
intimidation tactics.
"Continuing offences will likely be responded to with continuing,
'daily' charges," the Health Board promises primly, just in case anyone
wonders if the city intends to be heavy-handed and harassing about
enforcement.
Concerned about economics losses resulting from the
alienation of faithful old customers? No problem, the health police
blithely assure restaurateurs -- just get new customers: "Vancouver
restaurants will ... have to do their part by adapting to the new
marketplace and attracting patrons who seek out 'smoke-free'
establishments."
Moreover, city hall bureaucrats -- no doubt all experienced
entrepreneurs in the notoriously competitive restaurant trade --
are confident that economic losses are not much of an issue. They make
vague, reassuring noises about the experience in "other
jurisdictions." ("Other jurisdictions" means various U.S. cities
where restaurant smoking bans have been tried, since the Canadian
experiments in Vancouver and Toronto haven't been around long
enough for a test.) Well, some of the news coming from south of the
border is bad news indeed.
Some examples: A Southern California Business Association survey of
600 restaurants, released last April, found that half of the establishments lost significant business (an average
14.3 per cent drop) and expected to lose more as the result of smoking bans. A survey of New York
restaurants conducted last year showed the ban in
that city resulted in 67 per cent of restaurants experiencing sales
declines averaging 19.9 per cent. More than 45 per cent of
the establishments surveyed said they had laid off employees as a result of the ban.
In this month's issue of The American Spectator magazine, senior
correspondent John Corry chronicles the experience in Mesa,
Arizona, where the local smoking ban is destroying people's
livelihoods: "...the Corner Cafe is up for sale. Donna Thornton
used her life savings to open it. It is small and neat, with
whitewashed walls and red-checkered tablecloths, and Ms. Thornton's
two daughters work there as waitresses. But the smoking ban has
killed breakfast, and lunch is up and down. No one wants to buy
the Corner Cafe now, and Ms. Thornton is quietly desperate. The
troops are full of stories like that. Hard times have come, and
life is being leached out of Mesa."
One has to wonder if the folks at Vancouver City Hall would be
willing to bet their own jobs on the bland assurances they are
offering to restaurateurs here.
The crowning arrogance of the obey-us-or-else newsletter
comes in this sentence: "We expect your patrons to conform to
society's norms while in your establishment." Isn't it comforting
to know that, in a world of uncertainty and change, Vancouver City Hall has the power
and authority to establish norms for all of society?
Return to main page to access and view the Vancouver Health Board's circular to city restaurants
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