Dangerous 4 a.m.
Bar Bill Experiment at Intuit Dome in Inglewood Places
Profits Over Public Health & Safety
SAN
RAFAEL, Calif., Aug. 26,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Alcohol Justice and the
California Alcohol Policy Alliance (CAPA) are calling upon
California Governor Gavin Newsom to VETO AB 3206. The dangerous
"district" bill barely passed through the legislature and seeks to
destroy the protections of uniform last call in the state and
expose the entire Los Angeles area
to greater risk.
AB 3206, introduced by Assemblymember Tina McKinnor (D-Inglewood), will allow the VIP lounge at
billionaire Steve Ballmer's Intuit
Dome Arena to keep selling alcohol long after a L.A. Clipper's
basketball game or other event has ended – and long after the legal
closing time of any other bar in the state.
"If the Governor does not veto this bill, it will not only
create a very real threat to health and safety throughout the L.A.
area, but it will set a horrible public policy precedent for the
entire state," said Cruz Avila,
Executive Director of Alcohol Justice. "There will surely be a
flood of copycat district bills to follow from other legislators
being pressured by billionaire arena owners and alcohol sellers in
their districts demanding the same dangerous privilege."
Just one more hour of alcohol sales in one venue will disrupt
the protections of California's
uniform, statewide 2 a.m. last
call. It will expose surrounding communities–in fact the
entire L.A. basin–to increased harms and costs while only the
alcohol sellers in the epicenter of Ballmer's dome see the marginal
economic benefits.
In 2018, the evidence for increased harms was presented to the
legislature in an Alcohol Justice/CAPA report entitled The Late
Night Threat, Science, Harms, and Costs of Extending Bar Service
Hours. It highlighted the existing data supporting how the acute
effects of extending alcohol sales would spread to "Splash Zones"
surrounding various cities in California.
More recently, another analysis was released by the respected
Oakland-based Alcohol Resource
Group (ARG), a project of the Public Health Institute.
"The High Cost of the 4 A.M. Bar
Bill" was a first of its kind cost-benefit analysis
detailing the effects of changing state alcohol policy to allow
later last call at bars, restaurants, and clubs. The analysis
disturbingly documented the worst concerns of Alcohol Justice and
CAPA that public health and safety would be severely compromised if
California's 2 a.m. last call fell.
There was considerable and widespread opposition to AB 3206
throughout the state and in the Legislature:
Jeanne Shimatsu, Prevention
Director at the Asian American Drug Abuse Program (AADAP)
stated,
stated: "Extending the bar service from 2 a.m. to 4 a.m. to an exclusive group of
consumers does not minimize the collateral impact by those
inebriated drivers once they leave the entertainment site and enter
the public zone. The host city and neighboring splash zone cities
will feel the cost burden for material damage and, worse, the
ripple effect to families and communities should it result
in the loss of life."
"AB 3206 is a reckless piece of legislation that prioritizes
profits over public safety. Allowing the Intuit Dome to extend
alcohol sales until 4 a.m. sets a
dangerous precedent for the entire state. The data is clear:
extending last call leads to more drunk driving incidents, more
accidents, and more lives lost. One life lost is simply too
many," said Assemblyman Tom
Lackey (R-Palmdale), a
retired California Highway Patrol
Sergeant.
During the Senate floor debate on the bill Senator Kelly Seyarto (R-Murrieta), stated: Members I oppose this
bill this is actually a very exclusive club in the Intuit Dome
that's being built right now that will only allow exclusive members
to drink until 4 o'clock in the morning then we'll turn them loose
on the streets of the Inglewood,
which is a city that I used to serve. That is the last thing that
city needs. If they think that opening venues and having drinking
until four in the morning is good for just exclusive groups, then
it should be for everyone. My contention is that it isn't good for
anyone. I encourage a no vote."
Even with considerable opposition, AB 3206 advanced but by only
one vote in the Senate and will soon go to the Governor who has
until the end of September to sign it, VETO it, or allow it to
become law without his signature. Advocates for public health and
safety are strongly urging Governor Newsom to veto the dangerous
policy change.
How the California Senate
voted on AB 3206:
Voted Yes: Senators Allen, Archuleta, Ashby, Atkins,
Becker, Bradford, Caballero, Cortese, Dodd, Durazo, Gonzalez,
Hurtado, McGuire, Padilla, Portantino, Roth, Skinner,
Smallwood-Cuevas, Stern, Umberg, Wiener.
Voted No: Senators Alvarado-Gil, Blakespear, Dahle,
Eggman, Grove, Menjivar, Min, Newman, Nguyen, Niello, Ochoa Bogh, Seyarto,
Wahab, Wilk.
Did not vote: Senators Glazer, Jones, Laird, Limón,
Rubio.
"We sincerely appreciate the wise decisions of those
legislators who voted no or stayed off AB 3206," said
Michael Scippa, Public Affairs
Director at Alcohol Justice. "But for those Senators who chose
to bend the knee to Steve Ballmer
and his well-heeled lobbyist by voting yes on the bill, the costly
and deadly consequences for the health and well-being of
Los Angeles residents and visitors
will be on your conscience."
"In March of this year, the passage of California
Proposition 1 opened a stream of revenue to address
mental health issues and improve services," stated Raul Verdugo on behalf of the California Alcohol
Policy Alliance (CAPA). "But the paradox remains —
when state legislators pass bills like AB 3206, they operate off
the pretense that alcohol plays no part and or no correlation to
mental disease and the crisis we face with the houseless on the
streets. State legislation like this will only continue to
undermine state health efforts to improve mental health and
substance use conditions and disease, ultimately increasing the
deficit California will continue
to suffer with little hope for a better tomorrow."
"The hazards of impulsively screwing around with last call
times have been called out by every major public health voice.
APHA, the Surgeon General, the WHO, the CDC-affiliated Community
Guide—all of them agree, you can't do it without putting lives at
risk," said Carson
Benowitz-Fredericks, Research Director at Alcohol Justice.
"There are many legislators who know to follow the science, and
this squeaked through the state senate by one vote. Now it comes
down to the governor who coined the phrase, 'Follow the science,'
to heed to his own advice and kill this bill."
FACTS
- AB 3206 will allow extending alcohol sales to 4 a.m. in
the VIP lounge at Steve Ballmer's Intuit Dome Arena where his L.A.
Clippers will play.
- The risks of extended service times apply to VIPs the same as
they do to anyone else, POSSIBLY MORE—consumption tends to increase
with wealth. Rich people running into working-class people.
- These "VIP" areas are notoriously devoid of accountability
and incentivized to cover up violence, sexual assault, and
injury, much more so than bars open to the public
- Keeping consumption confined in a "VIP" area creates a space
even more devoid of accountability than most late-night bars and
clubs
- AB 3206 trades the public health and safety of the greater
Los Angeles area for enhancing an
Inglewood corporation's
profits
- AB 3206 will subsidize and reward nightlife alcohol-sellers at
tax-payer expense
- AB 3206 concentrates profit while spreading risk, disruption
and harm
- Aside from the risk of assault, accidental injury, and motor
vehicle crashes, drinking until 4 a.m. creates conditions
where exhaustion + alcohol becomes more deadly than either would be
alone
- AB 3206 would create a slippery slope to strip away statewide
uniform protections of 2 a.m. last call
- A later last call does not fill any need expressed by any
reasonable adult, and granting this will make every major venue
with a "VIP" room demand the same
- AB 3206 disregards 40 years of peer-reviewed, public health
research on the dangers of extending last call
- AB 3206 would cost cities and towns in the Inglewood/L.A. "Splash Zones" millions in
harm, disruption, and additional police and ambulance service
- Alcohol-related deaths are out of control in California, climbing from 70% in only six
years. (From 10,800 deaths annually in 2015 to 19,335 in
2021. Esser et al. 2020; Jiménez, Demeter & Pinsker
2023)
- Alcohol-related driving fatalities also continued to rise, from
966 in 2019 to 1370 in 2021. (California Office of Traffic Safety
2023)
- AB 3206 ignores $35 billion in
annual alcohol-related harm in California
- A 4 a.m. last call anywhere in
Los Angeles is a threat to all of
Los Angeles
CAPA Member Organizations
- Alcohol Justice
- Alcohol-Narcotics Education Foundation of California
- ADAPP, Inc.
- ADAPT San Ramon Valley
- Bay Area Community Resources
- Behavioral Health Services, Inc.
- CA Council on Alcohol Problems
- CASA for Safe & Healthy Neighborhoods
- Center for Human Development
- Center for Open Recovery
- Eden Youth & Family Center
- Institute for Public Strategies
- FASD Network of Southern CA
- FreeMUNI – SF
- Friday Night Live Partnership
- Koreatown Youth & Community Center
- Laytonville Healthy Start
- L.A. County Friday Night Live
- L.A. Drug & Alcohol Policy Alliance
- L.A. County Office of Education
- Lutheran Office of Public Policy – CA
- MFI Recovery Center
- Mountain Communities Family Resource Center
- National Asian Pacific American Families Against Substance
Abuse
- Partnership for a Positive Pomona
- Paso por Paso, Inc.
- Project SAFER
- Pueblo y Salud
- Reach Out
- San Marcos Prevention Coalition
- San Rafael Alcohol & Drug Coalition
- SF DogPAC
- SAY San Diego
- Saving Lives Drug & Alcohol Coalition
- South Orange County Coalition
- Tarzana Treatment Centers, Inc.
- The Wall Las Memorias Project
- UCEPP Social Model Recovery Systems
- Women Against Gun Violence
- Youth For Justice
TAKE ACTION to STOP AB 3206
https://www.votervoice.net/AlcoholJustice/Campaigns/115851/Respond
Or Text PUBLICSAFETY to 50457
For More Information go to:
https://alcoholjustice.org/projects/california-alcohol-policy-alliance/ or
https://alcoholjustice.org/
CONTACT: Michael Scippa 415 847-3006
Raul Verdugo 415 686-3325
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SOURCE Alcohol Justice