Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Changing of the Guard at the State Liquor Authority



By Gamal Hennessy

In recent months, the New York State Liquor Authority has gone through turmoil. Political pressure from the outside and illegal activity on the inside has left the agency vulnerable to criticism. While Governor Paterson tries to clean house by appointing a new Chairman, the question is can this new appointee reshape the agency into something more relevant and beneficial to New York nightlife.

The SLA has faced several problems under the leadership of its former Chairman, Daniel Boyle. Carl Andrews, an aide to Governor Paterson,
was forced to resign after he allegedly tried to force Boyle to renew the liquor license for Cipriani when the iconic restaurateur’s license was in trouble last year. Just last month, the New York offices of the SLA were raided as part of a corruption investigation. Other SLA officials have recently resigned under a cloud. It was only a matter of time before Boyle had to pay a political price for all of this. His appointment was not renewed after the term expired in February.

Boyle’s successor is
Dennis Rosen, a graduate of Harvard Law School who has been with the NYS District Attorney’s office since 1982. During his tenure, Rosen has prosecuted civil and legal cases against attorneys, stockbrokers, insurance agents, telemarketers and construction contractors. His most relevant investigation involved going after infractions regarding the SLA. After his nomination is confirmed, the agency he inspected will be the one he has to lead.

The agency that Mr. Rosen inherits has a number of problems that need to be addressed. It was the agency’s
chronic lack of inspectors that created the circumstances for corruption to occur in the first place. The overall number of licenses granted is down, limiting the industry’s ability to be a viable economic force in the state. There is a backlog of about 2,400 outstanding license applications due to both the lack of inspectors and the conservative stance of Mr. Boyle. On top of all of that, the SLA is governed by a set of laws that haven’t been changed in any meaningful way since Prohibition.

It is an open question whether Mr. Rosen will be willing or able to bring in more inspectors, clear the backlog, and revise the laws to bring them in line with the economic and social realities of the 21st century while at the same time dealing with state politics, local government and community boards. The nightlife advocates I spoke to last week didn’t have any preconceived opinion of Mr. Rosen, but they are hoping for more balanced treatment than the previous administration.

Have fun.
Gamal

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