Huntington Beach council to consider nudity ban
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Kenneth Ma
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- A proposed ordinance to ban nudity in all public
places, including bars and restaurants, will reappear before the City
Council on Monday.
Meanwhile, the owners of the Flamingo Adult Theater plan to open their
all-nude, no-alcohol bar on Beach Boulevard near Talbert Avenue in the
next week.
Council members voted 7 to 0 at its July 5 meeting to table the
ordinance until Monday, citing a lack of information.
“This is such an incredibly critical issue in the community,” Mayor
Dave Garofalo said, adding that the council needed more time to make a
well-informed decision.
Councilwoman Pam Julien said more time is also needed to address
concerns, such as the possibility of the bar serving alcohol if nudity
was banned, whether the ordinance is constitutional and whether requiring
dancers to wear clothing would allow them to be closer to customers.
The ordinance, which would be enforced on all existing and future
sex-oriented businesses in the city, requires exotic dancers to cover
their private parts.
Since June, Talbert and Beach Inc. of Huntington Beach has been trying
to open the strip club, which would feature nude exotic dancing. The
Flamingo Adult Theater at 18121 Beach Blvd. -- a site of a former French
restaurant -- is undergoing its final inspections, said Ross Cranmer, the
city’s director of building and safety.’
Randy Garrou, an attorney representing the club, said the owners plan
to open Friday.
However, Cranmer said he doesn’t think the club will be done with its
inspections in time. He said the club will more likely open next week.
“There were a number of complicated issues which [city] staff has not
presented to” council members, Garrou said. “We are hoping that at the
next council meeting they come to the conclusion which we feel is
inescapable.”
If it opens, the club will be the first business in the city to
provide live adult entertainment. Patrons must be at least 18 years old
to visit, and the club will not serve alcohol.
Current city law permits a strip club but does not allow service of
alcohol along with nude dancing. For that reason, the Flamingo Theater
has been dubbed a nude juice bar.
In addition, city ordinances require exotic dancers to be at least 6
feet away from customers with rails around an 18-inch elevated stage.
Councilman Dave Sullivan said this type of business would not be
appropriate for Surf City.
“I’d like not to have it at all,” he said. “But we were told by the
city attorney that we would lose certain litigation over 1st Amendment
rights.”
Councilman Tom Harman said he does not like the business, but city law
allows for it.
Harman said he is concerned such a business could attract
prostitution, drugs and other vices to the neighborhood.
Such vices would not exist, Garrou said, because the club will adhere
to all city restrictions separating dancers and customers.
“Prostitution does not occur at well-run clubs of this type, and
particularly does not occur where there are severe customer-dancer
separation restrictions,” Garrou said.
Lt. Chuck Thomas, a spokesman for the Huntington Beach Police
Department, said the department’s main goal is to ensure the club follows
proper laws and guidelines.
“We [will] take appropriate action to make sure those laws are
followed,” he said.
Last year, council members considered a similar ordinance to ban
public nudity but decided to delay action on the advice of City Atty.
Gail Hutton. She said action should be delayed pending the outcome of
federal and state court cases involving sex-oriented businesses versus
cities.
In March, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the city of Erie, Penn.,
in its decision to ban public nudity at a sex-oriented business.
A city staff report cited the Supreme Court ruling that “public nudity
was not inherently expressive conduct, [and] public nudity ordinances are
not ‘content based’ restrictions on speech that are subject to ‘strict
scrutiny’ by the Court.”
Neighboring Newport Beach also was successful in defending its laws,
which require exotic dancers to wear G-strings and pasties.
Deputy City Atty. Scott Field said the proposed public nudity
ordinance was not brought to the City Council earlier because it took
time to gather supporting evidence.
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