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In
Baltimore's Corner Bars, 'Smoke Free' Era Awaited With Anger,
Trepidation
By DAVID J. SILVERMAN
Capital News Service
BALTIMORE - It's a chilly afternoon in Baltimore's
Highlandtown, but inside a modest corner tavern, Rob Aull is
getting hot under the collar.
"The bar is like a second home to us, a place where we can
relax, listen to music, watch television, drink - and smoke
cigarettes," he says. "I don't wanna go running into the street
or hiding in the corner to smoke a cigarette."
But if Baltimore enacts a bill banning smoking in
restaurants and bars, which was approved Monday by a key City
Council committee, Aull may have no choice.
With the full council poised to pass the ban as early as
next month, tavern owners fret that regular customers will
either stay home or take their business less than a mile away to
Baltimore County, where tavern smoking is still legal. If
passed, the legislation would take effect Jan. 1 of 2008.
The bill has triggered intense opposition from the
Restaurant Association of Maryland, which has worked with other
groups of bar owners to defeat the proposal. On the other side,
the ban's proponents, who include smoke-free advocates and other
health groups, say they hope a smoke-free Baltimore will be the
catalyst for a smoke-free Maryland.
The Restaurant Association of Maryland says the ban will
strangle small, corner taverns like Ginger's, which Aull
frequents because he works across the street. Ginger's, like
dozens of other small East Baltimore taverns once known
affectionately as "working man's clubs," is a narrow, unassuming
place that is easy to walk by without noticing.
It is located on S. Conkling Street just off Eastern
Avenue in the heart of Highlandtown, the blue collar ethnic
neighborhood that epitomized industrial East Baltimore but is
now feeling the effects both of gentrification from nearby
Canton and an influx of Latinos from Upper Fells Point.
Bartender Deborah Bittan said places like Ginger's would
have a more difficult time adjusting to new regulations because
they don't have the space or resources to set up a patio or
drinking area outside.
She said at least 90 percent of the bar's patrons smoke
every time they visit.
One of those people is Kim Flemke, who said she would be
willing to protest to prevent the ban.
"If they don't let us smoke, there's gonna be a lot of
(angry) people around Highlandtown," she said. "Some people are
going to just get their beer cheaper and drink at home."
Just a few blocks away sits the Knotty Pine Inn, another
corner tavern where opposition is even stronger.
"Our clients have already let it be known that if they
can't smoke they will buy their own beer and drink at home,"
said owner Fred March, who along with his wife, Alice, lives
over the neighborhood pub. "I had my share of the American dream
and owning my own business, and now the government wants to put
a boot on my neck."
Alice March said she is already resigned to the idea that
if the ban is enacted, she will have to sell the pub they have
operated for the last seven years. She is on the board of
directors of the Maryland State License Beverage Association,
which has been fighting the ban.
Sixteen different states have banned smoking. In Maryland,
Montgomery, Talbot, Howard and Prince George's counties have all
enacted bans.
Smoke-free advocates say exposure to second hand smoke is
unfair for employees. Their opponents say working in a bar or
tavern is a choice for employees to make.
A study completed by Hugh Waters, an assistant professor
at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Health in 2006, showed
severe economic and health costs attributed to exposure to
second hand smoke.
In Maryland, costs related to adult and childhood illness
resulting from second hand smoke in 2005 totaled about $597.6
million, the study found. It also was responsible for 1,577
adult deaths and 24 child deaths, the study said. Those figures
are compatible though slightly higher than national averages
according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
Ban proponents, however, cite studies from Montgomery
County and smoke-free states that show no loss of revenue for
restaurants and bars.
"There's no long term loss of revenue," said Eric Gally, a
lobbyist for the American Heart Association and the American
Cancer Society. "Every study shows that within a very short
period of time, everybody goes back to their regular habits and
the whole thing becomes a wash."
Fred and Alice March and the Restaurant Association of
America say such studies are skewed because they look at the
entire restaurant industry, including fast-food chains, and not
small taverns like their own.
"We go to national conventions, and every single bar and
restaurant owner says it has not helped but hurt their
business," said Alice March said.
The Baltimore bill in its present form may provide
something of a loophole to corner bars. The city health
commissioner will have the authority to grant smoking waivers if
applicants can prove the ban imposes an "undue financial
hardship" or that "other factors exist that would render
compliance unreasonable."
Even so, the March's remain unbowed in their opposition.
Aside from steep fees a waiver would cost, they complain about a
lack of clear guidelines in the bill and that their livelihoods
may be determined by the whim of a commissioner.
Despite the trepidations of several bar owners and bar
goers, such pessimism is not uniform.
Sitting down to a beer and a few cigarettes after work at
the Brewer Hill Pub and Grill, Highlandtown resident Peter
Bayles took a break from chatting about sports and the war in
Iraq to discuss the ban, which he says will not affect the
tavern business in Baltimore.
"Any way you look at it, people are still going to go to
bars, they're still going to watch football, and they're still
going to go out," he said. "They're not going to want to risk
driving to Baltimore County or paying for a cab just so they can
still smoke." He also managed to see a silver lining. "Maybe it
will help me quit," he said.
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