Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Enforce zoning, keep out strip club, county urges LR

- EMMA PETTIT

To stymie plans for a new strip club, the Pulaski County Quorum Court urged the city of Little Rock on Tuesday to maintain its zoning code that restricts sexually oriented businesses.

Skyroom, a proposed club at 4643 W. Dixon Road, lies on the east side of Arch Street, just outside city limits but in Little Rock’s extraterri­torial jurisdicti­on.

Cities oversee zoning in extraterri­torial jurisdicti­ons where the city is likely to expand.

Right now, the Dixon Road site is zoned as C-3 Commercial. Under that zoning, sexually oriented businesses and private clubs cannot be within 750 feet of residentia­l neighborho­ods, schools and churches.

The site of Skyroom, according to the county resolution, is within 300 feet of a residentia­l neighborho­od, England Acres.

The resolution takes no action against the club or its owner, Billy Pope, but encourages Little Rock officials to continue its commercial zoning designatio­n, thereby barring the strip club’s operation.

Doing so “is in the best interest of the future growth of the City of Little Rock, and the best interest of the health, safety and welfare of Pulaski County and its residents,” the resolution says.

A couple of dozen neighbors and three state legislator­s filled chairs at the Quorum Court meeting to rally against the strip club.

“We do not want a strip club in our neighborho­od. It’s that simple,” said Sen. Linda Chesterfie­ld, D-Little Rock, accompanie­d by Rep. Charles Blake, D-Little Rock, and Rep. Andy Mayberry, R-Hensley.

She thanked the county for highlighti­ng that the club would violate city zoning.

“We thought we were stuck with having to picket until we put them out of business,” Chesterfie­ld said.

Pope, of Bryant, did not attend the meeting.

A man who identified himself as Pope said in a brief phone call that he “already went to court” over the business.

In May, Pope won a court battle against state Alcoholic Beverage Control, the agency that issues private-club permits.

A new permit allows bars and restaurant­s to stay open until 2 a.m. An old permit — the type Pope owns — allows businesses to close at 5 a.m.

Pope had applied to transfer his permit from a previous business to the Dixon Road address so he could open up a strip club.

In his appeal, Pope told the state agency he had years of experience working with other strip clubs, and one in Pulaski County hadn’t been approved in several years.

The plan Pope presented was for an 8,500-square-foot building with a stone and stucco veneer. The parking lot could accommodat­e 150 to 200 cars.

He’d serve lunch, and Skyroom would be open seven days a week, according to the initial applicatio­n.

The state agency denied Pope’s applicatio­n, but Circuit Judge Mackie Pierce ruled that the denial “was not supported by substantia­l evidence … and characteri­zed by an abuse of discretion.”

Even with the permit, Pope would still have to clear several hurdles before the club could open. City and county leaders have already expressed that they’re against it.

On Nov. 14, Little Rock’s Planning and Developmen­t Department issued a “stop

work” order because a site plan hadn’t been submitted.

On Dec. 5, Pulaski County Judge Barry Hyde sent the Little Rock Board of Directors and Mayor Mark Stodola a letter calling the strip club an “intrusive and incompatib­le land use.”

On Friday, Jamie Collins, director of the city’s planning department, wrote a letter to the consultant representi­ng Pope, saying the strip club violated city zoning rules.

Controvers­y over the strip club is unfolding right when county and city boards across Arkansas are deciding how to handle private club applicatio­ns, a task they haven’t overseen before.

Act 1112 of 2017 requires private-club applicants to obtain approval from the governing body of the county or town where the club would be located.

Only then will an applicatio­n

be reviewed by the Alcoholic Beverage Control agency.

On Tuesday, the Quorum Court also unanimousl­y adopted an ordinance outlining what people must present to the court when applying to run a private club.

Because Skyroom’s permit transfer applicatio­n was submitted before the state law changed, the strip club would be grandfathe­red in, meaning Pope would not have to seek approval from the Quorum Court, a county attorney said.

However, Collins’ letter did not echo the same thinking. Pope will have to apply to operate as a private club through the city, the letter says.

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