Reading the various articles, I have concluded (my opinion from information available):
-Pinball Cafe had no license to operate
-Did not apply for a variance for their amusement business as suggested by Cnlr. Parks
-Late in the game, applied for a liquor license and tried to be a straight-up bar and remove their extra pins, but by that point the moratorium was on so they closed shop. Had they had a license earlier, the moratorium would not have affected them.
-I guess they could argue that they were "closed down" because the moratorium meant they were never going to get a license and they decided to pull the plug themselves.
I think there would be more sympathy all around if they just came out and said "this is our first business, we made some mistakes, all we wanted to do was give people a great time, unfortunately we got caught in red tape and acted too late to turn things around". Pointing fingers at "the man" isn't accurate.
I would be curious if they proved the actual business model could work.
-Pinball Cafe had no license to operate
-Did not apply for a variance for their amusement business as suggested by Cnlr. Parks
-Late in the game, applied for a liquor license and tried to be a straight-up bar and remove their extra pins, but by that point the moratorium was on so they closed shop. Had they had a license earlier, the moratorium would not have affected them.
-I guess they could argue that they were "closed down" because the moratorium meant they were never going to get a license and they decided to pull the plug themselves.
I think there would be more sympathy all around if they just came out and said "this is our first business, we made some mistakes, all we wanted to do was give people a great time, unfortunately we got caught in red tape and acted too late to turn things around". Pointing fingers at "the man" isn't accurate.
I would be curious if they proved the actual business model could work.