Thursday, March 31, 2016

Maz Bar gets transformed into Jersey's Saloon - NDG explodes with rage

   "Any ideas on what a good concept for Maz's should be when it reopens?" asked new owner Peter Sergakis.
   "No I don't. Sorry. But I liked the karaoke nights," said I.
   "Grumble, grumble," said Sergakis.
    I had that exchange a few months back with restaurant/bar owner Peter Sergakis, who had recently purchased the dilapidated Maz bar next to NDG Park.
  Other solid bar owners had kicked the tires on the bar but had found that the numbers did not justify what it would take in renos.
   See also: Save Maz!
    Sergakis, who owns countless bars, restaurants and nightclubs, was undaunted and injected cash into a Coyote Ugly-type bar, which has stirred much interest since a promo video went online.
    For those unfamiliar with Coyote Ugly, it's a movie about a bar where free-spirited feisty young bartenders dance around on the bar wearing cowboy boots and hats and jeans and vamp around in a highly-confident dominant manner.

  This is in no way a strip club, as such establishments require a special license permitting nudity.
   The only possible objection to such a bar might be that dancing on a slippery bar looks a little perilous.
    However someone named Mary Jane Caro went on to Facebook to denounce the project: "I'll agree that Maz was hardly Downton Abbey, but it wasn't 'here's a shipping container of illegal sex workers out back' either."
   Huh? Shipping container of illegal sex workers?
   Mary Jane Caro also suggested that this bar would drive down property values and had no place near a school, even though a bar has been there for about 60 years. She even suggested that her outrage should be worthy of mainstream media coverage.
   This aggressive nimby call of the wild was apparently sufficient to persuade the city councillor Peter McQueen to oppose the bar.
   McQueen said that both he and the party he represents oppose the bar, although another Projet Montreal party official I spoke to could not confirm that the party opposes this bar.
  "Projet Montreal is working to mobilize the community against this type of bar," he wrote on his Facebook page.
   It would be interesting to get him to define what he means by "this type of bar."
   Undoubtedly McQueen would prefer a government funded food-bank granola bar that serves kale to bicycle-riding single mothers, but we live in a world that tolerates diversity last I looked. (Incidentally McQueen recently expressed fierce opposition to extending Cavendish Blvd, which is also possibly worth noting).
   Of course bars have been closing left and right around Montreal for many years due to nimby pressure from noise-complaining neighbours, a trend which has also coincided with a drop in U.S. tourism and an increase in Americans thinking that Canada is boring.

Should bars be banned?

 Banning a bar is a practice that raises ethical and economic questions.
   Landlords are denied the right to rent out their property when municipalities ban bars, yet that same municipality will still demand the property tax from that landowner.
  In the past municipalities derived tax revenues directly from businesses through a business tax. Now they just collect it directly from landlords, so municipalities no longer have any need to encourage businesses, which has led to many more empty storefronts around the city.
  When bars are not permitted, other levels of government lose revenue in terms of  GST/PST, so social programs suffer when legit commerce is denied.
   Banning bars is also a slippery slope when it comes to corruption.
   A few years ago the Cote des Neiges/Notre Dame de Grace borough banned new bars in almost the entire borough, a borough so large it would be Canada's 30th biggest city.
   The ban conferred a major advantage to already-existing bars, so such a ban represents a gift to certain entrepreneurs.
   Such bans also encourage bribery, as any entrepreneur wishing to get an exemption from the ban might consider reverting to attempting bribery.
   Over-exuberant policing has also played a role in the anti-bar oppression in the West End, as a bar on Decarie recently lost its long-held right to have nude performances based on occurrences that did not lead to permanent bans in other cases.
   Unfortunately there is still no charter of human rights-style protection in existence to protect people and businesses from zoning and bylaw abuse by politicians and police.
   It would be nice if borough politicians would put their energy into more interesting and relevant pursuits, such as saving the Snowdon Theatre, or creating 200 parking spaces by laying some slabs atop the Decarie Expressway north of Queen Mary, a worthy project that politicians in the area have failed to address. 

13 comments:

  1. Since the city is going to cover part of the 720 near the Convention Centre, they should do likewise with Decarie which has been an outstanding issue for much longer.

    Remember when the PQ jokingly suggested that businesses alongside "the depressway" were welcome to finance such a project? Yeah, I laughed too. :-(

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  2. Hello Kristian,

    I'd like to to clarify a few things as it was unpleasant to start my day with a friend pointing out that my name and photo were used in this text.

    My post certainly didn't start the social media ire fire - I read about the new concept for the bar in the Parents NDG Facebook group where the flames were well fanned and a heated discussion both for and against this new venture was underway. The Projet Montreal response had already begun, which is where I obtained Peter Mcqueen's quote about the petition and upcoming meeting about this issue. If you're interested, you're welcome to join the group and the conversation.

    The single comment of mine quoted in this article was not part of the Facebook post, but a humorous response to a friend's remark. I'll admit my wording is strong, but the mention of a shipping container of illegal sex workers was obviously comedic hyperbole, and a counterbalance to the Downton Abbey reference.

    To be clear:

    I'm not at all against bars in NDG, in fact I'd welcome a great new bar in that exact location. What I (and many other NDG parents and residents) am reacting strongly to is the blatant sexism and exploitation of women in the video promo, which showed a shadowed female body, with a drink poured over her bare navel, splayed out on a bar. This strongly implied a an entertainment concept of drinks served by barely-clad gyrating women. I'm glad to see the video has since been removed from the bar's social media profile. It's worth mentioning that though the movie 'Coyote Ugly' was, as you state, "about a bar where free-spirited feisty young bartenders dance around on the bar wearing cowboy boots and hats and jeans and vamp around in a highly-confident dominant manner" this was a sanitized and idealized Hollywood depiction of this type work environment. Revealing clothing and sexualized behaviour are likely a condition of employment in this context, and that is a larger problem.

    The current Maz bar is located on Sherbrooke close to Marcil. It's cheek by jowl with a densely populated family neighbourhood. It's also very close to a large park which is popular with hundreds of local families, a daycare, an elementary school, and Melons and Clémentines, a locally owned business which is frequented by moms and babies. Hardly the right location for a Hooters concept bar.

    Let's hope that a lack of paying customers leads to a change in the business concept, and quickly.

    I'm hoping that the Cinema NDG group (which as of November 2015 had raised over $9.5 million of the required $12 million it says is needed to renovate the landmark) has success with the Empress Theatre revival, though their June 2016 deadline for fundraising is drawing near. This should drive more traffic to the area and hopefully something more like the Terrasse St-Ambroise will find success here.

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  3. In McQueen's typical grandstanding, what does he mean by the weasel words "family friendly?"

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  4. I liked Maz Bar. I'm sorry, but I did. I'd sit there on warm summer evenings with a friend as an ex-Hell's Angels driver recounted us with stories of jacking truck loads of goods destined for the U.S. That sort of place can't be replaced.

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  5. Again I ask, why you gotta be such a jerk? Why are you picking on Mary Jane Caro? What is her crime that you need to hold her up to ridicule? Why be THAT guy?

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  6. Nobody is picking on anybody Mary. The article sheds light on a misleading and ill-informed campaign to stop a legitimate business that already exists and is not bothering anybody. It shows how hyperbole and fear-inspired exaggerations are employed to tarnish a regular establishment. The place is not a sex bar and even if it were, why shame and oppress sex? Do you really want to be that guy Mary?

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  7. You need to put his picture on your blog? Why? Is she a politician? Is she a public figure?

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  8. Yes. She is leading a campaign which has, for some reason, been embraced by at least one person in power even though it is based on incorrect information.

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  9. Attn: Mary Lamey & Mary Jane Caro -If the issue with the bar is that it's "not the right fit" for the neighborhood than why was there ever any fuss made over the various "massage parlours" on sherbrooke west? These rub & tugs are far more detrimental to the makeup of the neighborhood than a bar that is replacing an old bar. There was a bar there for 60 years and now it's an issue due to it not being "the kind of establishment that a family oriented neighborhood wants? Newsflash, there aren't just families living in the area, many young people of various background that want local options and don't want to go downtown, mile end, griffintown or to Pjs will finally have a decent option in the area.
    - from the gazette comments

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  10. I must recon that I singed the petition thinking it was going to be a nude dancer bar - I was misled (kicked myself in the butt coz I normally triple check). Although it's not a concept I like, I can't say it can't be done.

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  11. I would like to clarify a few things.

    My Facebook post certainly didn't start the social media ire fire - I read about the new concept for the bar in the Parents NDG Facebook group where the flames were well fanned. You're welcome to join the group, where this issue has been discussed from a multitude of viewpoints, both for and against the proposed bar concept. The Projet Montreal response had already begun, which is where I obtained Peter McQueen's quote about the petition and upcoming meeting about this issue.

    The comment quoted in your post was also a humorous remark to a friend's response to my post. I'll admit my wording is quite strong, but the remark about a shipping container of illegal sex workers was obviously comedic hyperbole, and a counterbalance to the Downton Abbey reference.

    To be clear:

    I'm not at all against bars in NDG, and I know that Maz has a long history as such in the exact same spot as Jersey Saloon. What I was reacting strongly to (and what many other NDG parents are as well) is the blatant sexism in the video promo, which showed a shadowed female body, with a drink poured over her bare navel, splayed out on a bar. This strongly implied a Coyote Ugly concept of drinks served by barely-clad gyrating women. I'm glad to see the video has since been removed from the bar's social media profile, though the curious can still find it on the Gazette website.

    The current bar is located on Sherbrooke close to Marcil, a stretch that sadly has seen better years. It's cheek by jowl with a densely populated family neighbourhood. It's also very close to a large family park, an elementary school, and Melons and Clémentines, a locally owned business which is popular with moms and babies. Hardly the right location for a Hooters concept bar.

    Let's hope that a lack of paying customers leads to a change of business concept for Jersey Saloon, and quickly.

    An even more fervent hope: that another type of bar opens in this space, perhaps a family friendly pub with decent food and a great terrace. This which would appeal to a much wider demographic, and one that already lives within walking distance and is hungry for alternatives to the Monkland Village.

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  12. The perfect type of bar for that spot is something like Else's on Roy. Do that and watch the money roll in. The area is chock full of middle and upper-middle class folk who have money and whose going out for drinking options are limited to one other spot on Sherbrooke and two on Monkland. Personally I don't think this saloon will do well and he'll fall flat on his ass. Knowing the area and what will make you the most money doesn't seem to be a strength of Sergakis'. Has nothing to do with the weasel-word discourse of "family friendly" and "family oriented." Whatever those mean,

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  13. Totally agree with you, Marc. An Else's-type bar would be perfect and everyone would be happy to have a groovy bar - at last - in NDG. And BTW, I often went to the Hogs and Heifers in NYC, the bar where they filmed Coyote Ugly, and it was a blast. You could dance on the bar and if a woman took off her bra while doing so, she drank for free all night. As evidence of the success of this offer, the back of the bar was festooned with a vast variety over-shoulder-boulder-holders in all shapes and colours. On the other hand, as my friend pointed out, she could drink at the Hogs for much less than the cost of a Victoria's Secret bra since they free poured and hootch was cheap. The Hogs was conveniently located in the heart of the meat-packing district, far away from any residential area, so its 4am closing time was no problem to anyone.

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