Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'Liquor and Beer Licensing Board' Tag

TEJON STREET NEIGHBORS OK WITH BARS, PEEP SHOW BUT NOT SODO

August 29th, 2010, 12:00 pm by

It’s not often that businesses line up to take shots at one of their neighbors.

 There’s usually a comradery among businesses. They work together to advertise and attract customers or to fight issues of mutual concern. Remember how Westside businesses rallied to take on the homeless issue in Colorado Springs last winter?

 Neighboring businesses on South Tejon Street are rallying, too. Against one of their own. SoDo nightclub.

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The SoDo nightclub sits across the street from Southside Johnny's at South Tejon Street and East Moreno Avenue in this 2006 file photo by The Gazette's Kevin Kreck.

Owners of a couple bars, a coffee shop, bank, motel, computer technology business and law firm are fighting SoDo, an 18-and-older hip-hoppy dance club at the corner of Tejon and Moreno Avenue.

This isn’t a place where everybody knows your name. But they might know your bra size. Here’s a look at its web site.

SoDo is a more than just a dance joint, although check out the go-go dancer from a photo on its website.

Besides the barely dressed girls, there is loud music and DJs and body painting and  loud music and booty shaking contests and loud music and, well, you get the picture.

A $10 cover charge gains entry to all the fun.

But neighbors say it’s not much fun for them after midnight most weekends.

They describe an ugly mix of alcohol-fueled, testosterone-charged men brawling regularly.

Young people urinate freely in the streets, alleys and parking lots around the club, witnesses say. Vomiting patrons are a common sight, they say.

Perhaps most troublesome, gunfire is regularly heard, neighbors say.

That’s why a dozen or so businesses lined up at Liquor and Beer Licensing Board on July 15 to oppose SoDo’s request to install a rooftop beer garden. Here’s a look at the neighborhood from FlashEarth.com.

Neighbors say SoDo’s is bad enough already. They can’t imagine how bad it would get if the club’s mayhem was raining down from the rooftop.

SoDo owner Tim Rose of Summit Commercial Group declined to talk to me about his club. Neighbors say he is similarly unresponsive to complaints they lodge about violence, trash, noise and the rest.

These are not prudish neighbors. They already tolerate an X-rated movie house and bookstore, New Eros, in the block. (In the age of streaming, high-definition Internet porn, it’s amazing anyone still needs a peep house. But that’s another column.)

And neighbors insist this isn’t about competition between bar owners. Johnny Nolan, owner of Southside Johnny’s, said he doesn’t compete for customers with SoDo’s 18-and-up dance crowd. It’s a much different demographic.

Although the neighbors convinced the liquor board to reject the rooftop beer garden, the fight is not over. SoDo has sued to overturn the decision claiming the board exceeded its jurisdiction, abused its discretion and acted in an aribtrary and capricious manner.

While we wait for the case to surface in court, how about a couple body shots! And shake that booty!

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HOW MANY LIQUOR STORES ARE TOO MANY?

December 2nd, 2009, 1:38 pm by

On Fountain Boulevard, just east of the intersection of South Chelton Road, is Fountain Square. It’s a modest little strip center with a Korean restaurant, a Black Beauty Supply store and Frontier Liquors on the far end.

It is visible below in a photo from Google Maps. It backs up to a 7-Eleven convenience store, visible in the photo. And behind the 7-Eleven is Kwik Stop Family Market.frontiergoogleview

Frontier Liquors has been fighting to keep a new liquor store from opening about 20 feet behind it on Chelton.

The owner, Bong Chung, rallied his customer and neighbors in 2006 to defeat the proposed store. He got hundreds of signatures on petitions opposing the second liquor store, which would have been owned by You Lee and located next to the Kwik Stop, which is owned by his family.

Neighbors also came to the Colorado Springs Liquor and Beer Licensing Board to testify against the new store. 

Here’s a look at the Kwik Stop, again from Google Maps. The car wash in the photo is now gone, replaced by a new building where Lee’s mother, Sun Lee, now wants to locate a liquor store called “Your Liquor.”

frontierkwikstop

 The neighborhood is southeast of downtown Colorado Springs, visible below in a map from FlashEarth.

 frontierliquor

 

Sun Lee went before the Liquor and Beer Licensing Board on Oct. 16 seeking a license for her store. She said she had invested $100,000 in the business. She also introduced petitions signed by about 860 neighbors who said they wanted and needed another liquor store in the neighborhood. About 130 neighbors opposed her store.

Chung produced petitions with signatures of 75 neighbors opposed to Your Liquor and about 50 who favored it. Frontier Liquors also was supported at the hearing by several neighbors who testified against Lee.

In the end, the seven member board voted and ended up in a 3-3 tie. As a result, the board ruled that Lee’s application failed. You can read the minutes of the Liquor and Beer Licensing Board at this link.

Lee is appealing the ruling, saying that the board must rule by majority vote. She wants the board to be ordered to grant her application or the case resumed until the board reaches a majority vote.

theresacisnerosFourth Judicial District Judge Theresa Cisneros will decide the case.

 

 

 

 

 

 

You can read my previous Side Streets column on the Valley Hi liquor store feud.

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