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  • Grapes Of Wrath

    GRAPES OF WRATH
    By Alison Hewitt Staff Writer

    San Gabriel Valley Tribune, CA
    March 29 2007

    Residents, business owner fight over liquor store

    SAN DIMAS - More than 50 members of the community turned out Tuesday
    night at a City Council meeting in an unsuccessful effort to prevent
    a gourmet liquor store from getting approval to sell alcohol downtown.

    The issue turned emotional as the Armenian applicant and would-be
    owner charged San Dimas residents with discrimination and the city
    with imposing excessive requirements on him. Residents accused him
    of threatening business owners and trying to open a shop that would
    diminish downtown's reputation.

    "I'm just a businessman," applicant Sid Maksoudian told the council,
    and then launched into a history of the Ottoman Empire, where the
    Armenian Genocide occurred in the early 1900s. "I feel like I'm back
    in the Ottoman Empire."

    Although Maksoudian's proposed business received unanimous approval
    from the Planning Commission, it came before the council after
    Councilman Denis Bertone appealed the commission's decision.

    After more than three hours of testimony, the City Council voted 3-2 to
    deny Bertone's appeal. The three-man majority asked city staff to draft
    a modified version of the Planning Commission's permit requirements,
    reducing the conditions imposed on Maksoudian, for approval at the
    next meeting.

    "Justice was done," Maksoudian said.

    The proposed store would sell high-end wine, top-shelf liquor and
    micro-brewed beers, as well as caviar, gourmet cheeses, cigars and
    other pre-packaged items, Maksoudian said. Residents and business
    owners labeled it just another liquor store, and vilified Maksoudian.

    They accused him of shuttering downtown's San Dimas Wine Shop and
    Tasting Room and threatening to shut down other businesses that
    did not support his application. Maksoudian denied the accusations,
    saying established San Dimas business interests were targeting him
    to drive him out.

    Heidi Daniels, owner of the wine tasting room, said Maksoudian had made
    a systematic effort to tear down her business. He admitted to reviewing
    her permits to see if she was operating legally, but denied informing
    the county health department that she lacked a health permit. The
    health department closed down the tasting room last week, Daniels said.

    "I acknowledge that it was the legal right of the applicant to report
    our oversight to the health department," Daniels said.

    "Unfortunately, he did not stop there."

    She accused him of demanding that the Chamber of Commerce revoke her
    nomination to the board of directors, which Maksoudian confirmed. She
    also said he told other business owners that he was going to shut
    her down, which Maksoudian denied.

    Julie Salazar, an active resident and board member on the nonprofit
    Festival of Arts, said business residents had come to her and
    complained, too. She acknowledged asking Bertone to file the appeal
    that called for Tuesday's hearing.

    "He went down the street merchant by merchant, and through veiled
    threats he told them, `You're either for me or against me, and if
    you're against me, things have a way of happening,"' Salazar said. He
    cited the wine tasting room as an example of his power, Salazar said.

    Councilmen Bertone and John Ebiner opposed granting the liquor permit
    to Maksoudian's market, citing a large number of existing businesses
    with liquor licenses in the area. Councilmen Jeff Templeman and
    Emmett Badar said they believed they needed to give Maksoudian a
    chance before condemning him.

    Mayor Curtis Morris argued that Maksoudian had every legal right to
    open according to the city's own laws, and that the city must grant
    the permit.

    "I would prefer something other than a liquor store at that location,
    but I don't think we have that discretion," Morris said.
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