Bar/Restaurant
Business Up 12% in Smokefree New York
10,000
new jobs added to City's hospitality industry
Tobacco
interests pretend that smokefree workplace legislation hurts business, but tax
revenues prove otherwise.
NEW YORK, 1/6/03...
New York City's smokefree workplace law took effect in March, and business is
booming. According to Commissioner of Finance Martha Stark,
"New York's bars and restaurants paid the City 12 percent more
in business taxes in the months since the law began than they did in the
corresponding period in 2002."
From April through September of
2003 (the latest data available), the department collected $12 million in
general corporation and unincorporated business taxes from bars and
restaurants, up from only $10.8 million in the same period of 2002.
"Although these statistics are
far less important than the number of lives that will be saved, they are a good
indication that New Yorkers are adjusting quite well to the smoking ban,"
adds Stark.
In addition to
higher revenues, almost 10,000 new jobs were added to the City's
hospitality industry, according to data from the New York State Department of
Labor.
The situation in
New York is similar to the situation elsewhere according to Joe Cherner, founder
of BREATHE-- Bar and Restaurant Employees Advocating Together for a Healthy
Environment. "Every peer-reviewed study using sales tax data shows
that clean air is good for health AND good for business," says
Cherner.
"It's normal
that some restaurants and bars lose money or go out of business. It
has nothing to do with providing clean air. The restaurant/bar business
has extremely high turnover. A bar or club that was trendy last year
might not be trendy this year."
According to the
Zagat Survey, 91 restaurants closed since New York's smokefree workplace law
took effect. But 174 restaurants opened and many more openings are
scheduled, according to Zagat.
California became
the nation's first smokefree workplace state in 1995. Since then, Delaware, New
York, Connecticut, Maine, and Massachusetts have passed smokefree workplace
legislation. That number is expected to grow in 2004.
"Tobacco
interests love to get the media to report about businesses losing
money." adds Cherner. "But the truth is that for every
loser, there are two winners."