News

Quinton’s may lose license

Enlarge image

Quinton’s may lose license

JAKE NAUGHTON/Herald photo

Enlarge image

Quinton’s may lose license

JAKE NAUGHTON/Herald photo

Also by Cara Harshman:
Sharing tools:

E-mail this article:




Vote 0 Votes

In its first formal crackdown on restaurants turning into taverns, the city of Madison is considering suspending or revoking the liquor license from Quinton’s Bar and Deli.

The Alcohol License Review Committee is in the process of scheduling a hearing for the bar and restaurant, located at 319 W. Gorham St., which was licensed in 2005 as a restaurant with a liquor license.

As a restaurant, the establishment is required to sell more than 50 percent food, verifying its primary operation as a restaurant rather than a tavern.

Capitol Neighborhoods, Inc. filed a complaint with the city clerk in late 2006 saying Quinton’s operates mainly as a bar, and six months later the city conducted its first audit of the establishment.

Finding Quinton’s records did not differentiate between alcohol and all other sales, the audit was inconclusive. Quinton’s alcohol license was renewed last summer with a warning from the ALRC to become a bona fide restaurant.

“Having the liquor license is a privilege,” said Katherine Plominski, the city’s alcohol policy coordinator. “When it is granted and there are conditions on it and you don’t follow those conditions, that is when the ALRC steps in like they are doing with Quinton’s.”

In a second audit, the city comptroller found alcohol sales over the past six months represented 50.82 percent of sales, said Stephanie Rearick, ALRC chairwoman, which defines Quinton’s as a tavern.

“I very much realize that Quinton’s is very much a student hangout, so the best that can be said for Quinton’s is that they are a victim of their own success in that they are such a popular night spot,” said City Council President Mike Verveer, District 4.

At the ALRC meeting Wednesday night, Assistant City Attorney Steven Brist said the city attorney’s office issued a summons to have a formal revocation meeting with Quinton’s owners. He said he does not have a definitive timeline yet for when the hearing will take place or when they will reach a final decision about the restaurant’s fate.

“It is a very odd case,” Verveer said, adding most other cases the city has stepped in on involve taverns that receive frequent police calls where fights break out or where the management seems unruly.

Ald. Michael Schumacher, District 18, sits on the ALRC and said restaurants turning into bars after hours is a dangerous practice because restaurants do not have the same security protocol as bars.

He notes the shift taking place with “how the body deals with establishments who possibly create unacceptable alcohol-related behavior in public.”

Schumacher said the ALRC does not want to take the fun away from the downtown area; it just wants to reduce alcohol behavior issues.

At Wednesday’s meeting, the ALRC also approved a beer license for D.P. Dough, a new calzone restaurant at 244 W. Gilman St. The committee also delayed a request from Samba, a restaurant just a door down from D.P. Dough, to create an outdoor seating area that could serve alcohol.


2 Comments | Leave a comment

But if you get rid of Quinton’s, everyone is going to go to house parties where they will be raped and pillaged!

quinton’s better not lose their license.

the atmosphere there beats a lot of places.

it has an unfortunate location near all the huge apartment complexes, and since it kicks so much ass people of course wanna get drunk there at night.

but, the food is great, they have a great beer selection, a good motif in their design.

and mostly, the audit or whatever is still not conclusive, because, i was actually watching the review board on TV going over this, and they were saying that the audit was started as the school year started

thus,

the sales trends during the school year, and winter, are different than the summer months when there aren’t as many students around and when the lure to eat there is greater with the outdoor seating.

so what im tryin2articulate, is that, like, if the summer months would have been included, we would be seein some different numbers here.

if quinton’s liquor license gets taken away i will be very disappointed.

Leave a comment

To comment anonymously or if signed in, leave name and e-mail blank.

Place a shout-out!
Top Classified Ads (view all)

HOUSES FOR Fall 2010. All houses are on W Dayton or N Bassett. 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, or 8 bedrooms. All have parking. madisoncampusrentals.com

Place a classified ad

Advertising