Faced With The Alternative, I Think We Can Afford To Be A Little Pragmatic Here
The Villager reports that some East Village residents seem to be deciding that a gastropub may be better than a methadone clinic after all:
Some members of the E. Fourth St. A-B Block Association have shifted their opinion on a beer and wine license for the European Union restaurant, a turn of events that may allow the restaurant to sell alcohol after all.
“I’d like to see something work out,” said Frank Macken, the block association president, who previously opposed a liquor license for E.U. “It could be a model for the kind of restaurant we’d like to have in our neighborhood.”
E.U., at 235 E. Fourth St. has been closed since the week of May 14. The State Liquor Authority denied its request for a liquor license in early March, citing a rule that makes it harder to obtain a liquor-license in an area where there are three within 500 feet of each other. The S.L.A. also cited opposition from Community Board 3 in its decision.
Restaurant owner Bob Giraldi said he closed the restaurant because it was unprofitable to operate without alcohol.
But after a block association meeting on June 22 attended by Giraldi and his wife, Patti Greaney, both parties said they were looking for a compromise that might allow E.U. to obtain a beer and wine license, which is more limiting than a liquor license.
A June 8 meeting between Giraldi and the block association was tense, attendees said, but the meeting last week was far more civilized.
“I thought it was very fair,” Greaney said of last week’s meeting. “I thought both sides were able to voice their opinions.”
Opinions on the block are split “about 50-50,” Macken said. “Some are adamantly opposed, some are more pragmatic.”
Backstory: My Fist, Your Gastropub; Make Way For The Methadone Clinic!;
The Problem With Community Boards, Too, Or, Making The East Village Oversaturated With Boutiques, One Denied Liquor License At A Time.