Sydney's reputation as a Nanny State is increasing. As the election approaches, will is cause the government to lose?

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A Sydney bar says the state’s liquor licensing red tape is so nonsensical that hanging a mirror ball has put it at risk of being saddled with extra restrictions.

The mere act of installing one, the venue has claimed, could see it fall foul of the authorities.

But Goros, a Japanese themed “izakaya” in inner city Surry Hills, has hung one up anyway in defiance at what its owner calls Sydney’s “crazy” liquor laws.

“Effectively we’ve had our mirror ball banned,” said Justine Baker, the chief executive of Solotel, the pub company that owns Goros.

The state’s liquor authority has insisted a mirror ball isn’t a specific exemption in its liquor licence. But Ms Baker has said being classed as a nightclub could see restrictions such as having to serve drinks in plastic glasses put in place. She told news.com.au it was just another example of the ridiculous rules surrounding entertainment in Sydney. The restrictions have also forced her to turn away a grandmother from a family celebration because she couldn’t prove she was over 18, and shut a nightclub after tenants in a new block complained.

In a series of articles, news.com.au will delve into the ridiculous rules that stifle the lives of NSW residents and businesses, particularly those in the night-time economy.

In later articles, we’ll look at the festival where ballet was almost banned because it could lead to drunkenness and the popular local pub plagued by noise complaints before a schooner was even poured.

Those within the state’s hospitality industry say it has been decimated by a combination of lockout laws, vexatious noise complaints, over officious councils, excessive, overlapping and contradictory regulations and risk-averse police.

And it’s shaping up to be a hot topic at the state election on Saturday, with Labor claiming the Coalition government has declared “war on music” and an entire political party formed to slash red tape. But talking to news.com.au yesterday, Premier Gladys Berejiklian said “it frustrates me when there’s red tape that doesn’t need to be there”.

Data from the Australian Electoral Commission has shown more younger people than ever before are on the electoral roll, chiefly due to people signing up prior to the same-sex marriage vote.

A report by Deloitte Access Economics has found Sydney’s night time economy was underdeveloped to the tune of $16 billion.

MIRROR BALL ‘BAN’

A NSW Government investigation into the state’s night-time economy found that a mirror ball could indeed be seen in some quarters as sign a venue could be acting as a nightclub.

The report cited NSW Police advice that “the installation of a mirror ball implies an intent to provide for a dance floor. Police would have concern that the installation of a mirror ball in a premise that has not been approved for a dance floor could mean that the premises is being used for purposes not allowed.”

However, Ms Baker insisted Goros was about as far from a King Cross-style booze barn as you could get. Lanterns hang across cosy booths as people munch gyozas next to arcade games.

“It’s a small bar with great music and there’s lot of quirky Japanese games and karaoke rooms. It’s a very different model to a nightclub,” she said.

“But if we put a mirror ball on the ceiling and people danced underneath, it starts to operate like a nightclub. It’s just crazy, you can’t regulate people wanting to have fun, so we don’t have a mirror ball or a dance floor and people just end up dancing where they want.”

Solotel said the licence conditions, inherited from the previous pub, had strikingly specific restrictions on what decorations it needed to avoid.

“Typical features of a nightclub operation may include loud music, a dance floor area, low background lighting, and intermittent bright or coloured lighting effects,” the licence reads.

The firm said once it was deemed a nightclub extra conditions would be imposed such as serving drinks in plastic glasses.

Solotel admitted mirror balls weren’t specifically ruled out but nonetheless said information she had gained from police made it clear a mirror ball could be seen as the paraphernalia of a nightclub.

Liquor, Gaming and Racing NSW confirmed Goros’ licence does not mention a mirror ball and it can operate as a nightclub but there is a no-glass condition in this instance.

NSW Police has been contacted for comment.

Yet, tucked away, Goros does indeed have one mirror ball. Not in the main bar but the decoration silently spins in the corner of one of the karaoke booths.

“To date the authorities haven’t seem to have found issue with it yet, let’s hope it stays that way,” the firm said.

‘IT’S MAD’

One of the frustrations is the confusing overlap of conditions between liquor licences and development applications. Both, for instance, can specify trading hours but those hours don’t necessarily match.

“That gives an opportunity for a government body to look at your business and work out which one they will use to regulate you,” Ms Barker said.

Solotel said it “easily” spends more than $100,000 a year on lawyers, consultants and reports to battle the rising tide of paperwork.

“We should be concentrating on fun and culture and adding to the fabric of people’s lives and yet we spend inordinate amounts of time on red tape and regulation,” Ms Baker said.

Labor’s spokesman for the night time economy, John Graham, told news.com.au Sydney was swiftly becoming like the fictional Utah town of Bomont in the 1984 film Footloose featuring Kevin Bacon where dancing was banned.

“It’s mad. Everyone accepts it’s a problem. There are 669 venues where there are bans and restrictions on live music, bands, DJs, rock music, disco, mirrors balls,” he said.

“There are things you should regulate — noise, opening hours, service of alcohol — but the government shouldn’t tell you not to listen to a particular sort of music and not to dance.”

He said he wanted to see a “safe, diverse and vibrant night-life”.

But Ms Berejiklian told news.com.au she was in furious agreement when it came to over-regulation.

“It frustrates me when there’s red tape that doesn’t need to be there. I always say to my team that if there are examples that don’t pass the common sense test, let’s deal with it,” she said.

“Maintaining public safety is a priority but so is reducing the burden of red tape. We’ve tried to get rid of processes that are burdensome for people, whether you’re a citizen or someone running a business.”

OLD-TIME DANCE BANDS ONLY

The Government is nearing the end of a three-month blitz to help venues get rid of outdated music related licence conditions.

Sydney’s Civic Hotel has had a restriction on “rock and roll bands” axed and the Central Coast’s Toukley RSL has seen a bizarre rule that demanded only “old time dance bands” on Friday nights removed.

Yet, of these 669 venues, only 21 have applied to have their conditions relaxed. LGNSW has speculated this is because “the problem may not be as substantial as represented”.

But Labor’s Mr Graham has another explanation. He said venues were concerned any attempt to get out of the red tape quagmire could backfire.

“They’re worried if you put one condition up for grabs you have to put the others up for grabs too,” he said.

Ms Baker agreed: “We could try to change the conditions but that’s not wise because it can end up you get more conditions added (such as) your trading hours changed.”

City of Sydney Council and LGNSW told news.com.au that applying to remove one condition shouldn’t see new restrictions imposed. But LGNSW said a new restriction could be added if it related to the one the venue was seeking to ditch.

If a ban on rock music was being lifted, pressure from police or residents could see a “qualifying condition” added that bands cease playing before a certain time.

Labor said if it won the election, it would simply sweep away all the bizarre rules, no questions asked. But the Liberals contend it would be “irresponsible” not to consult locals and police beforehand.

NO GRANDMAS ALLOWED

A few kilometres from Goros, Solotel also owns the Kings Cross Hotel. Venues in the Cross still have to scan the ID of each person that enters after 9pm, despite patronage having plummeted due to the lockouts.

“If you don’t have ID, you can’t get in. If I tried to go into one of my own venues without ID, I couldn’t get in,” Ms Baker said.

“We’ve had functions with grandmas who had no ID and they couldn’t get into our venue. Almost every Saturday night we turn away several 40-year-olds.”

She also decided to close a rooftop bar after complaints from neighbours in a new apartment building.

Ms Baker said there was an attitude in NSW that entertainment was too risky and so it should be shut down. But she rejected arguments that regulation and the lockouts had made Sydney safer.

“The lockouts are a blunt instrument which is not going to make Sydney a safer place,” she said. “Sydney is already a safe place, crime rates have been reducing in the last decade.

“If you have six pubs in a row and nothing else that’s where tensions happen but if you have a diverse fabric of businesses, that creates a safer environment.”

She said she was “excited” the night-time economy was an election issue but the major parties weren’t going far enough: “Neither party has come out and said they will repeal the lockouts, a symbolic gesture to say we believe in night-life.”

Anger with the state of NSW’s hospitality industry has led to the birth of an entire political party, Keep Sydney Open.

“There’s no shadow of a doubt NSW is more extreme that other states. They’re infantilising people who just want to go out and sit with friends in a bar,” founder Tyson Koh said.

“Unless we get a really good signal from the government, we wouldn’t be looking to invest, purchase or open a late-night venue as the business model doesn’t exist,” Ms Baker said.

Perhaps a signal that they can finally hang the mirror ball above the bar?

`- Additional reporting by Shannon Molloy.

What ridiculous rules in NSW make you seethe? Comment below or email benedict.brook@news.com.au