Quote:
Originally Posted by metal
The QVNA zoning committee listens to th esurrounding neighbors at a public hearing when outdoor seating is requested. The neighbors either express support or opposition and th ecommittee decides to suport or oppose based on the neighbors comments since they are the ones most affected by people eating and drinking outside their house. The neighbors of Ansil on Bainbridge came out in full force and opposed outdoor seating. That is why it was denied, because the people immediately affected by it did not want it. Other restaurants like Java and Red Hook gained the neighbors support and therefore were granted outdoor seating.
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Such as with the Ice Cream parlor that tried to open at South and Hancock. Rick Cole had the audacity to sit down at a SSHD committee meeting the other day and claim that QVNA supported the place but that there were a significant number of residents on the block who opposed it. I suppose when an entire community is supporting a project and the 3 residents on a commercial block oppose it....majority loses in QVNA. Thankfully, everyone at the committee meeting called him out on it, specifically John Foy who basically said to him "no you didn't....you catered to 3 residents on the block, don't try to deny it."
I wish the Irish Times luck but I don't know that anything can overcome QVNA.