Posts Tagged ‘california’

Council discusses cigar shop proposal

Saturday, January 30th, 2010
Camarillo Acorn
Pepperdine students want to open store by next year
By Jeffrey Dransfeldt jdransfeldt@theacorn.com
January 29, 2010

Adam Wall envisions a place where people can escape the stresses of work with a fine cigar and a good cup of coffee.

Wall and his business partner, Nathan Welch, are working to make that dream a reality. They hope to open a cigar shop in Camarillo this year.

The two entrepreneurs, seniors at Pepperdine University, attended the Jan. 13 Camarillo City Council meeting to see if their proposed business would be compatible with city guidelines.

Before the meeting they met with City Manager Jerry Bankston, who provided them with information on Camarillo’s smoking ordinance.

The ordinance covers indoor smoking prohibitions and is being expanded to address smoking outdoors as well. Camarillo’s proposed changes would require individuals to smoke at least 25 feet away from a place of business, which is 5 feet farther away than the state’s requirement concerning smoking outside public buildings.

Councilmember Mike Morgan is willing to work with the pair to allow them to operate the cigar lounge within city guidelines.

“I think if they have a ventilation system and purifier (it could work),” Morgan said, adding, “They have their rights as long as it doesn’t impact anyone else.”

The proposal for the store came up during the study session at the council meeting.

City Councilmember Charlotte Craven focused on ventilation and whether the business would share adjoining walls with other businesses or be a stand-alone structure. The possibility of an enclosed smoking room inside the lounge with its own ventilation was also brought up.

Mayor Kevin Kildee reserved comment, and Morgan declined to go into too much detail until more discussion on the proposed changes to the city’s smoking ordinance takes place at the next council meeting.

“As a general rule, the city supports business owners and tries to be flexible with the many constraints we deal with, such as balancing business with the issue of secondhand smoke,” Assistant City Manager Bruce Feng said.

Other cities have made allowances for businesses that sell tobacco products. Moorpark revised its smoking ordinance in July, exempting tobacco distributors, retail tobacco stores and similar types of businesses from strict smoking bans.

Wall sees Camarillo, specifically the Old Town section, as an ideal location for the cigar lounge. It would allow people to go shopping, eat out and stop by the lounge at the end of the evening, he said.

The Newbury Park native envisions the lounge as a “classy place where people can gather and have good social interaction.”

He said Camarillo has the right demographics for a successful business. Wall described a potential patron as “somebody who is looking to get away from the work world and relax for a little while.”

He also indicated there could be interest from students at California State University Channel Islands.

Wall hopes to open in the fall, if everything goes smoothly. He and Welch have their business plan in place and are starting to look for investors.

“If all goes well, we’re hoping to open by September,” Wall said. “That would be nice, before the next holiday season.”

The two friends wrote a letter to the Camarillo City Council addressing their thoughts concerning the smoking ordinance.

In part, the letter made a distinction between cigarette smokers and cigar and pipe smokers, saying, “Cigar and pipe smokers are not compelled by addiction to smoke around those who are not smokers.”

And it maintained that less litter results from people who smoke pipes and cigars relative to cigarette smokers.

The memorandum also referenced two local cigar companies, Old Oaks Cigar Company and The Cigar Zone, both in Thousand Oaks.

Wall said he believes lounge customers would abide by the proposed ordinance change and only smoke inside the lounge and not right outside the store.

“I think the people (of Camarillo) have a high enough stature that they would respect that,” Wall said.

Pipe dreams and the freedoms afforded us in our Constitution

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

From SouthCoastToday.com

Pipe dreams and the freedoms afforded us in our Constitution

The “International Herald Tribune” in California published a report saying that a law took effect on January 9 barring smoking inside of government subsidized apartments with shared walls and ceilings. One 72 year-old woman, a smoker who lived in a retirement complex called Bonnie Brae Terrace was outraged, saying that little by little her freedom was being taken away. The ban had been organized by a group of retirees from her own complex who lobbied the city to stop second-hand smoke from drifting into their apartments by neighbors who smoked. The reactions from smokers and non-smokers was amazing and each side had valid points about what they should and should not be able to do in the privacy of their own homes.

My mind suddenly flashed back to the days that I visited my Grandfather Whitty and how I loved the aroma of the tobacco in his pipe while he sat in his chair and enjoyed his Sunday company. I never took my eyes away from him as he tapped his pipe gently. We bought him a can of tobacco from Adams’s Drug Store on South Main Street for every occasion and I cannot remember him without his pipe until he passed away at age 93. He lived in a tenement house on Bradford Avenue and I’m wondering what he would have said if he was told to give up his pipe. First of all, he came here from Ireland at an early age and worked fourteen hours a day in the mills. He came here for better opportunities and for the freedoms afforded in America. I know he would have shown them the door but out of pride and respect different living arrangements to suit him would have been made immediately. Reminiscing about these pipe dreams prompted my girlfriends and I to start thinking back to when we were in third grade at St. Mary’s Cathedral School. We prayed for the conversion of Russia at the age of nine. We remember our teacher, Sister Mary Faber, R.S.M., telling us that in some Communist countries children of our ages were made to tell authorities if their parents were doing or talking about something that was against the government and how such someone’s words could innocently jeopardize their families. We wondered jokingly if a nine-year-old in the year of 2009 would squeal if he/she caught someone smoking who shouldn’t be. They definitely would, and they would enjoy every minute of it, we decided. Most of us know by now that cigarettes are not good for out health but, it is legal. Many of us have live in tenements , apartments or condos. In my earlier years we were taught to be kind to our neighbors and to mind our own business. We didn’t know who smoked.,, had a cat or whatever. We respected our neighbors’s privacy and ways of life. But rules change everyday . California is home to our strictest anti-smoking laws and we can only imagine how these new laws will affect us at a later time.

Meanwhile, let us enjoy all of the freedoms that we have. Millions of people don’t have them.

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