Source: San Francisco Examiner Author: Emily Gurnon Of The Examiner Staff Contact: Pubdate: Sat, 27 Dec 1997 Website: http://www.examiner.com/ SMOKE IN BARS CLEARS JANUARY 1 Questions Remain On How New Law Will Affect Business Out with the old hazy cocktail lounge. In with the new smokefree bar. California's statewide ban on smoking in workplaces, which took effect in 1995, temporarily exempted bars and card rooms. But on New Year's Day, the exemption ends. Any indoor bars with employees other than the owner must comply or risk fines. Some tavern owners are afraid that when the smoke clears, they won't find many customers left. Others are resigned to the changes or determined to find creative ways around them. "I have people calling up hysterical: "What am I going to do?" said Bob Jacobs, a former bar owner who is now executive director of the Northern California Tavern and Restaurant Association, which fiercely opposed the law. "I spent five years in the Army in World War II, and for what? Is this my freedom?" "We are going to go with it, and we are going to accept it," said Bob Buich, coowner of the Tadich Grill in San Francisco's Financial District. "If the law said you can't wear plaid shirts, we wouldn't wear plaid shirts. A law is a law." The dangers of secondhand smoke prompted legislators to make California the first state in the nation to ban smoking in bars. Sit in a smoky bar for two hours, and you'll suck up as many carcinogens as if you had smoked four cigarettes, according to figures from the American Cancer Society. Between 4,200 and 7,000 Californians and about 53,000 Americans die each year from the effects of secondhand smoke, said Amy Weitz, spokeswoman for the organization's Bay Area chapters. "Smoke is not just a minor annoyance," Weitz said. "For workers exposed to it eight hours a day, several days a week, it's a major hazard for them. I think a lot of people don't realize that." But Will It Work? The question now is just how well the law will work. Will it prevent the 18 percent of California adults who smoke from having that Marlboro with their Manhattan? Steve Pedersen, 61, of Pinole, says he stops into Tommy's Bar in Pinole "no more than once or twice a day" and will continue to smoke his Raleigh filters there "till they throw me out." For people like Pedersen who have been banished from airplanes, restaurants and offices being shut out of bars is like losing their last refuge. "I think it's a bum rap," he said of the upcoming ban. "Nobody asked me. Did they ask you?" Depending on the county, either the health department or the local police will be responsible for enforcing the ban, said Rick Rice, deputy director of the state Department of Industrial Relations. In San Francisco, the Health Department will investigate complaints about bars that continue to allow smoking, and will look for evidence of smoking when officials do their regular rounds of health inspections. Bar owners may be fined $100 for the first offense, $200 for the second and $500 for subsequent violations within one year. After the third offense, the Health Department may ask the state Occupational Safety and Health Administration to investigate, which could result in a fine of up to $7,000. I'm Not A Cop But the law isn't exactly clear on how far an owner or bartender must go to get customers to comply. Bar owners must take "reasonable steps" to prevent smoking, such as posting prominent signs and requesting that smokers extinguish their cigarettes. But they need not physically eject a patron, or ask a person who may become violent to stop smoking. Must they stop serving drinks to a customer who insists on lighting up? The law doesn't specify. Larry Saros, who has owned the Wishing Well tavern on Irving Street and 17th Avenue for 19 years, says he will continue to serve drinks to smokers. "I'm not a cop," he said. "I'm going to do what the law requires me to do, and I'm not going to take this a step further." Fellow tavern owner Bob Fahey at Fahey's on Taraval Street says he too will follow the law, but is certain he will lose many of his longtime customers. "If they're going to step outside (to smoke), they're going to go home," he said. But The World Goes On Across the bay in San Leandro, Larry Murphy is more sanguine. Murphy put a 4foot by 8foot sign on the front of his bar, the Mustang Club at Hays and Davis streets, which reads, "New law Jan. 1: No smoking in bars. But the world goes on. We can all live with it." "My customers, more and more of them are nonsmokers," he said. "I think eventually we would have gotten around to it anyway." Besides, he says, the law will be good for his health and could bring other benefits, as well. "I'm going to paint over 30 years of smoke, just really lighten the place up, and not worry about it getting all dingy and dirty again," he said. At least two Bay Area bar owners have found what they think are ways around the ban. Cameron Palmer of Cameron's Restaurant & Inn in Half Moon Bay bought a 1966 English double decker bus, parked it next to the restaurant and plans to turn it into a parking lot smoking lounge for the Britishstyle pub. Bus Your Own Bus Customers will buy their drinks inside the restaurant and carry them out to the bus, which has been refurbished inside with tables and facing seats. Since no employees will enter the bus, there should be no violation of the law, Palmer figures. "The slogan is going to be, "Bus your own bus," he said. In downtown San Mateo, the staff at Barley & Hopps is gearing up for a Jan. 3 opening of its new smoking lounge, a completely separate room equipped with an intercom system by which patrons will order their drinks. Waiters will then leave the drinks outside the door of the lounge. "I think that any place can do this, as long as your employees don't go in there," said Krista Perris, banquet coordinator at the restaurant. A Prohibition Party Workers at Harry Denton's Starlight Room are resigned to having to tell their welldressed, cigarsmoking customers to put away those panatelas after Jan. 1. But first, they plan to celebrate. "On Tuesday the 30th, we're having a "Prohibition Party," said David McNees, maitre d' at the nightclub, which is on the 21st floor of the Sir Francis Drake Hotel on Post Street. "We're inviting everyone to bring all their cigars and all their cigarettes and smoke the night away," he said. ©1997 San Francisco Examiner