The Province

End is near for hookah lounges

Court decision means city’s two remaining establishm­ents have 30 days to close up

- Nick Eagland SUNDAY PROVINCE

Vancouver’s last remaining hookah lounges have just four more weeks until the city has the option to shut them down forever.

The owners of Ahwaz Hookah House and the Persian Tea House were charged with violating a 2007 city health bylaw that banned indoor smoking in commercial establishm­ents.

Though the bylaw had an exemption for hookah and cigar lounges, city council removed it in 2008 — and a seven-year court battle began.

In April, a B.C. Supreme Court judge dismissed the lounge owners’ appeal over the bylaw and when his reasons for judgment were filed Friday, a stay he’d issued allowing the lounges to remain open for 30 more days was put into effect.

In his reasons, Justice Peter Leask rejected the lounge owners’ arguments the shisha in hookah waterpipes wasn’t burning, the bylaw’s definition of smoking was too broad, the city was oversteppi­ng its power to protect public health, and the bylaw violates their Charter Rights.

Hamid Mohammadia­n, owner of the Persian Tea House, said despite mounting legal fees and all signs pointing to the end of his beloved Davie Street lounge, he’ll fight the decision.

The father-of-five said that after 17 years of unwavering support from his customers, he doesn’t intend to shut them out.

“I’m looking to God and if one day I have to go, I go to talk to mayor myself,” Mohammadia­n said. “They close me, I am open, because this is my life. I am 68. What can I do?”

In an act of protest, he began a 23-day hunger strike before the appeal hearing in April. Over the next four weeks, he hopes customers will come show their support and give him the chance to thank them for their patronage.

Mohammadia­n said he’s perplexed the city lets dispensari­es sell medicinal marijuana down the street while coming after him for letting them smoke herbal shisha indoors.

He’ll considerin­g switching to electronic vaporizers in the lounge, he said, but he’s wary of getting caught in yet another legal battle after the city amended the bylaw last fall to ban those, too.

Dean Davison, the lawyer who since 2008 has represente­d Mohammadia­n and the owner of Ahwaz Hookah House, said he’ll meet with his clients this week to discuss options, including appealing to the Supreme Court of Canada.

“Generally, I think fighting for smoking is always an uphill battle and I think it’s difficult for judges and politician­s alike to look at it reasonably and in some cases just legally,” he said.

Davison said he finds it “a bit mindboggli­ng” that people smoke pot in vapour lounges yet the city chose to crack down on his clients.

“However, it is, in the law, a choice the city can make,” he said.

 ?? JASON PAYNE/PNG ?? Hamid Mohammadia­n, owner of the Persian Tea House on Davie Street, says he’s perplexed that the city is shutting down hookah lounges but keeping medical marijuana dispensari­es open.
JASON PAYNE/PNG Hamid Mohammadia­n, owner of the Persian Tea House on Davie Street, says he’s perplexed that the city is shutting down hookah lounges but keeping medical marijuana dispensari­es open.

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