Kuwait Times

Ballet to end NYC’s dancing prohibitio­n

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Dancing is technicall­y illegal in thousands of bars, clubs and restaurant­s in the city that never sleeps, but New York campaigner­s are finally in sight of getting the law overturned. The “cabaret law,” passed in 1926, requires public spaces that sell food and drink to acquire near impossible-toobtain permits to authorize dancing indoors. Those without the permit can be fined. Repeat infraction­s risk bar owners losing their license to sell alcohol, which could in turn lead to bankruptcy.

Yet fewer than 100 of New York’s more than 22,000 bars, restaurant­s and clubs have the elusive permit, which is granted after mountains of Kafkaesque paperwork and jumping through prohibitiv­ely expensive hoops that Brooklyn councilman Rafael Espinal says unfairly discrimina­te against small business owners.

“It’s just ridiculous,” says the indignant 27-year-old Democrat in his basement office. He wants to repeal the law, which could be put to a vote in the New York City Council as early as December. “Let’s finally get this law off the books so that we can go after the real problem, whether it be noise, crime, unsafe conditions,” he snorted. “Let’s not go after dancing.” Espinal and pressure groups such as the Dance Liberation Network say the law has been used historical­ly to crack down on neighborho­ods with large minority population­s such as African Americans, Latinos and the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r) community.

Racist

Passed initially to assert control during the time of Prohibitio­n, some historians say its true goal was the closure of Harlem jazz bars in the 1930s, ‘40s and ‘50s to stop whites and blacks mixing. In the 1970s and ‘80s, it was used to close establishm­ents frequented by the LGBT community as it fought for its rights. In the 1990s, mayor Rudy Giuliani used the law to get tough on clubs in his fight against crime.

Today, it is little used, but detractors say it is invoked as an excuse to shut down premises considered undesirabl­e. One recent casualty was Andrew Muchmore, a lawyer who owns a bar that hosts live music in Williamsbu­rg, Brooklyn’s hippest neighborho­od. One night in 2013 when a group of customers were making noise outside, an inspector fined Muchmore $200 under the cabaret law.

When he went to pay, the office couldn’t find the docket. But Muchmore went to court anyway, charging the law violated the “sacred” First Amendment of the US Constituti­on, which guarantees freedom of expression. “I was bothered by the principle that such a law could exist in America and that offended my sensibilit­y as an American,” Muchmore told AFP. “I did not feel comfortabl­e that that could exist in the 21st century in New York of all places,” he said.—AFP

 ??  ?? A sign to repeal NYC’s Cabaret Law is seen posted at the Brooklyn venue Secret Project Robot.
A sign to repeal NYC’s Cabaret Law is seen posted at the Brooklyn venue Secret Project Robot.
 ??  ?? Rachel Nelson, Co-Founder of the Brooklyn venue Secret Project Robot poses for a picture at Cuckoo on October 20, 2017 in New York. — AFP photos
Rachel Nelson, Co-Founder of the Brooklyn venue Secret Project Robot poses for a picture at Cuckoo on October 20, 2017 in New York. — AFP photos

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