Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Fort Smith gains permanent entertainment districts
FORT SMITH — Arkansas’ second-largest city is now the home of two permanent entertainment districts.
The Fort Smith Board of Directors on Tuesday approved two ordinances to establish such districts downtown and in the Chaffee Crossing Historic Area.
The board also voted to add emergency clauses to the ordinances and adopt them separately, making them effective immediately.
Deputy City Administrator Jeff Dingman wrote in a memo that the ordinances were the result of the board asking the city staff to revisit discussion with the Fort Chaffee Redevelopment Authority and downtown restaurant and bar owners concerning the establishment of entertainment districts.
Arkansas Act 812 of 2019 allows cities to establish permanent or temporary entertainment districts. Fort Smith had already established temporary districts in its downtown area and at The HUB at Chaffee Crossing under an ordinance adopted March 17, enacted through the city’s special event permit process. The ordinance states that both were to be activated with a permit upon the city administrator’s approval for a specific period of time.
DOWNTOWN FORT SMITH
The Board of Directors passed an ordinance establishing a permanent entertainment district at The HUB during its meeting Aug. 4. Dingman wrote that after that took place, the city received a written request to specify an area of downtown as a permanent district.
“In anticipation that more such requests would follow resulting in a patchwork of such districts downtown, the ordinance presented includes a more cohesive boundary for the downtown entertainment district,” Dingman wrote.
“Staff attended a meeting of the Downtown Bar & Restaurant Association seeking feedback, and received overwhelming positive support for the proposed ordinance.”
Although this district has a smaller footprint than the temporary district, Dingman wrote that it encompasses most of the businesses downtown that operate as restaurants or bars along Garrison Avenue and Rogers Avenue between Third Street and 13th Street. The district also includes Brunwick Place and Rolando’s Nuevo Latino Restaurante to the north, as well as two large hotels, DoubleTree by Hilton and Courtyard by Marriott, the Fort Smith Convention Center, and the Bakery District to the south.
Dingman said at the meeting that the ordinance had been amended to include TempleLive at 200 N. 11th St. in the permanent district at the request of the owner, as well as additional properties between Temple-Live and the district’s original footprint to ensure that it is contiguous.
The ordinance establishing the temporary district will remain in effect and operate in conjunction with the permanent district ordinance, with the latter still allowing the temporary district’s larger footprint to be used for special events. The permanent district will be in effect from 10 a.m. to 2 a.m. the next day seven days a week.
The Fort Smith Central Business Improvement District Commission approved and extended its support for the action.
SECOND ORDINANCE
The ordinance establishing a permanent entertainment district in the Chaffee Crossing Historic Area, Dingman wrote, came at the request of the Fort Chaffee Redevelopment Authority after it worked with the various property owners involved. The hours of operation for this district will be 10 a.m. to midnight seven days a week.
The ordinance also establishes a temporary entertainment district within the same footprint that can extend those hours to 2 a.m. through a special event permit.
In an Aug. 21 letter to City Administrator Carl Geffken, Daniel Mann, executive director and CEO of the Redevelopment Authority, called the entertainment district an “opportunity for the property owners, tenants and visitors to the Chaffee Crossing Historic Area.”
He wrote that it will allow the community to have a unique indoor and outdoor experience and a place all can enjoy. It will benefit Fort Smith Brewing Co. and JKC Cellars, a brewery and a winery in the district, as well as other redevelopment projects taking place and several other properties ready to be occupied.
“The approved entertainment district will be a significant marketing tool and will allow the Fort Chaffee Redevelopment Authority the ability to recruit similar commercial and retail business and developers to invest in many undeveloped buildings still owned by the authority,” Mann wrote.
THE RULES
Outside the differences in operating hours, both ordinances lay out the same rules for the entertainment districts.
For each day of the week, participating businesses will need to use different colored wristbands, which are to be issued upon verifying that a patron is at least 21. Patrons will need to wear one to carry their alcoholic beverages throughout the district.
Alcoholic beverages lawfully sold by an establishment within the permanent entertainment districts can be consumed within the districts and adjacent public rights-of-way. All beverages must be in a paper or plastic cup no larger than 16 ounces, with the name or logo of the establishment and/or any specific event printed on it. All participating establishments will use the same cup design.
Alcoholic beverages in bottles, glass or cans are not permitted for sale or consumption outside of establishments in the entertainment districts, according to the ordinances.
Possession of more than one alcoholic beverage by a person at any time is forbidden, with the consumption or possession of one also not being permitted in or on a vehicle parked in any public right-of-way in the districts. The districts’ boundaries will be clearly designated with pavement markings and/or signs.