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Two more Downtown bars’ licenses iced for flouting COVID regs

BY THE VILLAGE SUN | Busted!

Trailing in the ignoble footsteps of Greenwich Village’s White Horse Tavern, two more Downtown nightspots recently had their liquor licenses summarily suspended.

On Fri., July 24, Governor Cuomo announced that 10 more place’s licenses had been iced that week, including Set L.E.S., at 127 Ludlow St., on the Lower East Side, and Cipriani Downtown, at 372-376 West Broadway, in Soho.

Cuomo said his new multiagency task force monitoring coronavirus-related regulations at bars and restaurants did nearly 1,100 compliance checks between July 21 and July 23, documenting violations at 84 locations.

Leading the task force are State Liquor Authority Chairperson Vincent Bradley and State Police Lieutenant Colonel Dominick Chiumento. Businesses found in violation of COVID-19 regulations face up to a $10,000 fine per offense, while egregious violations can mean immediate suspension of a bar or restaurant’s liquor license.

The license of Set L.E.S. was suspended on Fri., July 24. The day before,  S.L.A. Chairperson Bradley conducted a compliance check of the Lower East Side watering hole, reportedly finding eight patrons drinking directly in front of the restaurant and about 30 more congregating near the premises, all without facial coverings and not practicing social distancing.

The place reportedly was operating “an obvious outdoor, self-service bar from a window — exactly the kind of service the [governor’s] executive orders and S.L.A. restrictions do not allow,” Cuomo’s press release noted.

In addition, Cipriani Downtown’s liquor license was suspended Thurs., July 23. According to the governor’s press release, following numerous complaints, the S.L.A.’s Bradley conducted a check of the Soho hot spot on July 21. During his visit, he reportedly observed 17 patrons drinking and standing around tables with no chairs in front of the business, most of them without facial coverings.

Bradley said he also went inside the restaurant and saw an employee behind the bar with no face mask, plus four patrons buying alcoholic drinks at the bar, in violation of the governor’s executive orders.

The New York Post noted that Cipriani Downtown was a “hunting ground” for disgraced and incarcerated movie mogul Harvey Weinstein.

“We are very proud of what New Yorkers did to flatten the curve of the virus, but we have to protect our progress because no one wants to do that again,” Cuomo said. “That’s why we’re watching the bar and restaurant violations and the congregations in front of these establishments, as we believe it’s connected to the increased infection rate with young people. We’ve tasked the State Liquor Authority and the state police to help local governments more aggressively enforce the law, and they are doing just that, with dozens of violations found last night alone.”

Among the other bars and restaurants in New York State whose licenses were summarily suspended last week, Queens led the pack with six and the Bronx and Deer Park, Long Island, each had one.

At Aqua, in the Bronx, Bradley said he observed 12 patrons having drinks inside the premises, which is currently not allowed in New York City. In addition, kitchen staff and servers were spotted without face masks, while patrons were also illegally puffing on hookah pipes both inside and in front of the premises.

On July 18, S.L.A. inspectors checking on Guaro’s Tapas Bar Lounge, in Jackson Heights, reportedly saw more than 20 patrons congregating outside in front without face masks or social distancing. The inspectors returned shortly before midnight — well past New York City’s 11 p.m. curfew for outside service — and allegedly found more than 25 patrons “in a nightclub-like atmosphere, with music blaring and patrons not wearing facial coverings or practicing social distancing.”

Kandela, on Cross Bay Boulevard, was cited for similar violations, including “dancing directly in front of the business…a DJ playing music outside the premises, creating a nightclub-like atmosphere where patrons were clustered…a bouncer and waitstaff serving patrons without facial coverings…[and] serving well past New York City’s 11 p.m. curfew for outside service.”

Other places slapped with summary suspensions included La Pollera Colorada II, in Jackson Heights; Maspeth Pizza House; M.I.A. Made in Astoria; and Brik Bar, also in Astoria.

Meanwhile, outside of New York City, Secret’s Gentleman’s Club, in Deer Park, had its license suspended after an undercover inspection on July 17 by S.L.A. investigators and the Suffolk County Police Department.

The detail allegedly observed employees and patrons inside the club without facial coverings, including dancers performing while sharing the same stage pole and giving lap dances — violations of the governor’s executive orders and S.L.A. guidelines.

When the Secret’s owner was confronted by an S.L.A. investigator about the violations, he reportedly claimed it must have started without his knowledge after he had left. Yet the owner had already been caught on videotape buying drinks for the undercover agents and bragging about getting away with violating the executive orders.

Between July 21 and July 23, investigators from the governor’s new task force conducted 1,080 compliance checks across the state, documenting 84 violations. Since the start of the pandemic emergency, the S.L.A. has brought 443 charges against licensees statewide and imposed 33 emergency orders of suspension, immediately closing establishments in order to protect public health and safety. Queens has conspicuously had the most license suspensions.

On July 30, Cuomo announced seven more liquor license suspensions — in New York City, Westchester County and Erie County. Among the places nailed was Hi Life Bar & Grill, at 477 Amsterdam Ave., where patrons were reportedly observed being served inside under a permanent structure, a violation of the Department of Health’s interim guidelines for outdoor service.

Also among the scofflaws to have their licenses suspended after this latest round of inspections was the popular Bar Tabac, at 128 Smith St., in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn.

“On July 24, investigators…observed seven employees [at Bar Tabac] without facial coverings, including the premises’ manager, a bartender, the host and four members of the kitchen staff,” a release from Cuomo stated. “The licensee was well aware of the requirements, with prior violations of the governor’s executive orders in June.”

One Comment

  1. clayton patterson clayton patterson July 31, 2020

    There is no question there are numerous problems attached to running an outside bar service. No security, no bouncers, no way to 86 anyone, no way other than calling the police to control an out-of-control customer. If a person has bought a drink from somewhere else, and is standing in front of your restaurant you do not have the right to tell that person to move on. It is outside, you cannot enforce the mask rule. A public space.

    The bar owner really has very few rights over the patrons. In an outside space, you throw someone out of the bar’s enclosed space and they go where? Stand on the other side of the fence? They bring their own drinks from the bar across the street? The business has no authority, other than call the police.

    Numerous people are walking around with drinks in their hand.

    My area is designed to attract the masses of the young heavy-drinking partying crowd. There are a few well-known nuisance bars. These are the ones with years’ worth of complaints, yet, it is interesting to note, S.E.T, is the scapegoat example. S.E.T. is partnered with a couple of young Hispanics. Young people who grew up in the area. This is the one place the government goes after?

    Go to Lorcan Otway’s Facebook page, the St. Mark’s video posts. The streets are packed with partying people. Full street, from packed sidewalk to sidewalk. Many not wearing masks. Expensive convertible cars creeping through the crowds interacting with the party people. Honking horns. Some burning rubber. In my area, I have been told of the motorcycle burnouts in front of bars.

    No masks on inside workers? I see numerous examples of workers not wearing masks. Look back over The Village Sun’s pages, you will see examples. All the bars had a self-serve window.

    My question is why go after the young Hispanic business owners from the community?

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