New York Post

The night’s knight

NYC clubs toast Adams’ end to surprise raids

- By JENNIFER GOULD

Big Apple club owners are dancing with joy after a move by the city

— and its nightlife-loving mayor

— to finally scrap the decades-old practice of raiding their venues during prime, late-night hours.

The much-loathed MARCH initiative, or Multi-Agency Response to Community Hotspots, was launched by Mayor Rudy Giuliani to fight the city’s drug-fueled crime in the 1990s. It was further employed by Mayor Michael Bloomberg after he banned smoking indoors.

“They’d come to bust my balls on a Saturday night, looking for fruit flies in my bottles at 1 a.m. They never came at 10 p.m. on a Tuesday or Thursday,” restaurate­ur and nightlife veteran Stratis Morfogen told Side Dish.

“I had to stop serving drinks until they finished their inspection. It was very disruptive and unfortunat­ely very personal. And that’s why I got out of the nightclub business.“

Eddie Dean, who owned the A-list magnet Pacha in Midtown from 2005 to 2015, said his hot spot was raided twice — in around 2007 and 2013 — leading to shutdowns that cost the club around $2 million in lost revenue and more than $300,000 in legal fees.

The MARCH policies were “really abused and selectivel­y enforced,” said Dean, who currently runs industrial club Schimanski in Williamsbu­rg, Brooklyn.

Saves jobs, clubs

“Nightlife plays a major role in New York City’s economy but for years there was no respect for club owners as hard-working entreprene­urs. Mayor Adams is the first mayor to show respect to nightlife,” Dean said.

MARCH will now be replaced with an initiative called CURE — Coordinati­ng a United Resolution with Establishm­ents — that will use the city’s Office of Nightlife as an intermedia­ry, Adams announced last week.

The agency will try to resolve issues with businesses that stem from complaints first. Surprise raids during business hours will no longer be a first step — but a last resort.

Paragon owner John Barclay said at last week’s news conference that the end of MARCH could “save hundreds of establishm­ents, maybe more, and certainly hundreds if not thousands of jobs.”

The Office of Nightlife was created in 2018 by former Mayor Bill de Blasio, who tapped Ariel Palitz, a global hospitalit­y and government consultant, as its first director.

By 2019, the agency began to monitor raids, then about 10 a month citywide, Palitz said.

“The fact that Mayor Adams goes out every night has become a sort of joke, but he is supporting and appreciati­ng small businesses as an asset, not criminaliz­ing them as a liability,” Palitz, who stepped down last year, told Side Dish.

“The mayor’s job is not 9 to 5. He is showing respect for a 24-hour city and nightlife businesses that contribute to the city’s economy and culture.”

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