
ZONING
AND THE REGULATION OF ADULT ESTABLISHMENTS
BY DONNA KLEIN, nyarm
Seated: Robert Calica,
Reisman Peirez Reisman & Calica, LLP; Donna Klein, NYARM Executive
Director; Wayne Reed and Ted Yates, NYARM Associate Board Members.
Standing: Vince Callagy, NYARM Treasurer; John Hendrick, Manager
Board Member; P. Leonard Jones, President; Ben Jacobson and Nelson
Davis, Associate Board Members and Michael Wegielski, Sergeant-at-Arms.
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The guest speaker
at the New York Association of Realty Managers (NYARM) February
monthly membership meeting was Robert M. Calica, Esq., a partner
in the law firm Reisman Peirez Reisman & Calica, LLP. Mr.
Calica specializes in zoning cases that protect residential neighborhoods
from adult uses which are not in harmony with family living,
schools or places of worship and should therefore not be located
in a district established for community living.
According to Mr.
Calica, adult video stores, movie theaters that focus on films
dealing with specified sexual activities and anatomical areas,
bars, cabarets, etc. cannot coexist within residential areas
without having a negative impact. They also cannot coexist in
business areas without having a negative, secondary effect. Therefore,
in 1995, a regulation was adopted in New York City that stated
that adult business, such as those mentioned above, could not
operate in a residential or commercial zone. According to the
experts that defend the adult entertainment industry, the only
place you can operate an adult use in the City of New York is
quite literally the Staten Island landfill and the Brooklyn Navy
Yard.
TOWN
OF ISLIP STANDARD
Wayne Reed, Northeast
Plumbing Specialties; Mary LaSanta and Ron Myers, Mt. Hope Housing
Company and Nelson Davis, JAD Bags.
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While civil
liberties advocates viewed with alarm the prospect of the "forced
relocation of some 84% of [New York] City's 177 adult businesses"
which a unanimous New York Court of Appeals upheld last February,
this result was dictated nearly ten years earlier in the Town
of Islip, Long Island. The Court of Appeals cited 20 years of
municipal studies, from Islip to Austin, Texas, which reported
the "negative social consequences" and the threat to
the "economic viability of the community as a whole"
which proliferating adult uses pose to the communities in which
they are located, with documented increases in crime, depression
of property values and deterioration of the economic and social
welfare of the affected communities.
Mr. Calica reminded
the audience that, in an era which focuses on individualism and
the stretching of the first amendment to the nth degree, "it
is well to observe that both cases do not represent any retreat
by the courts from upholding constitutionally protected speech,
but rather simply represent deference to the exercise of good,
old-fashioned, boring municipal zoning power."
Marc Lewis, JAD Bags;
Mindy Krause,Taranto & Associates; Gary Mortman, R.D. Mortman;
Lea Pi, American Pipe & Tank; Ron Garfunkel, Service Directions;
Suz Landi, North shore Towers and Lori Mortman, R.D. Mortman.
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In the Town
of Islip case, the Court of Appeals said: "The governmental
interest supporting the ordinance is the eradication of the effects
of urban blight and neighborhood deterioration and furtherance
of the general underlying purposes of zoning, the enhancement
of the quality of life for the town#s residents. Studies relied
on and prepared by the town demonstrated that the location of
adult businesses in certain areas heightened public apprehension
about entering them, thus driving out traditional downtown businesses
as customers avoided locations near adult bookstores, increasing
criminal activity and lowered nearby residential property values.
To be sure, planning studies, by their nature, are not scientific
nor their prediction certain but the town was entitled to credit
the evidence in its study of past deterioration and the prediction
that, unless remedied, the deterioration would continue; it was
not required to wait before acting until its business areas became
wastelands. The study is more comprehensive than some' and the
town's conscientious effort to preserve the quality of its urban
life is entitled to 'high respect'."
NEW YORK
CITY DECISION
Chuck Holden, Esplanade
Gardens; Irwin Chopak, Dayton Beach Park #1; Irwin Sandler, Scientific
Compactor/Boiler; Wayne Reed and Angel Velasquez, Lockman Security
Systems.
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These same
standards of judicial review of zoning actions were echoed ten
years later when the Court of Appeals invoked the same principles
to conclude that the forced relocation of a majority of New York
City's adult businesses was valid.
The New York City's law's requirement that adult uses be relegated
to commercial and manufacturing/industrial zones simply imposes
the same requirement that any type of business found to have
a negative "secondary impact" which adversely affects
community character and residential property values (as with
a shopping mall or multiplex movie theater) be located in a venue
which is proper to such a use.
Barbara Glover, Queensview;
Patricia Ruggerio, Century Operating Corp; Bob Bernstein, Bernstein
& Bernstein, Esqs and Dave Goldstein, American Bulb Corp.
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In conclusion,
Mr. Calica stated that no one questions the importance of protecting
the vital force of the First Amendment or denies that sex-related
businesses fall within the Constitution's protections. Certainly,
the court recognized that the constitution requires that "ample
space [be] available for adult uses after the rezoning"
so that both operators and patrons of adult businesses will have
a forum for constitutionally-protected expression. Yet, as the
court emphasized in upholding both the New York City ordinance
and the Islip law upon which it is based, it is entirely proper
for municipalities to protect residential communities from the
negative "secondary effects of adult uses," just so
long as the goal is not to suppress them.
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