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State restricts alcohol at P6 restaurant by Sophia Fischersfischer@theacorn.com The state’s Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) agreed with an administrative judge’s ruling last week that the P6 restaurant and lounge in Westlake Village can have a permanent license to serve alcohol, but only under certain conditions. According to the ruling, the restaurant can serve alcohol between 9 a.m. and 11 p.m. on weekdays and 9 a.m. and midnight on weekends, limiting how late customers can purchase drinks. Legal hours for serving alcohol are 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. “The decision kind of shocked us,” said P6 co-owner Jerry Rubacky. “Obviously this decision has severe financial impact on us.” The restaurant is located on Agoura Road and adjacent to homes in the Stoneybrook development. Shortly after P6 opened a year ago with a temporary license, residents began complaining about late night noise. Some claimed that P6 was nothing more than a nightclub, but Rubacky strongly disagrees. P6 is a fine dining restaurant that serves about 2,600 meals a week to an upscale crowd between the ages of 25 and 65, said Rubacky. “The perception that has been created that we are in any way, shape or form a nightclub is absolutely wrong,” he said. P6 owners responded to residents’ concerns by adding tempered glass walls and landscaping to the restaurant’s outdoor patio, hanging a chain across a portion of the back entrance to discourage customers from using the alleyway between homes and the restaurant, and hiring security guards to patrol the parking lot every 30 minutes to encourage customers not to linger. But residents still complained of ongoing noise, called police and wrote letters to the city. “When you put a large business that intends to operate late at night in an area that is mixed residential and commercialfolks are going to protest,” said Chris Albrecht, district administrator in the ABC Santa Barbara district office, which covers Ventura County. Wanting to respond to both residents as well as the restaurant owners, Albrecht says he feels the judge “came down in the middle” by recommending approval of the license with restrictions. Unless there is an appeal by the owners or by residents, the ruling goes into effect on August 8. P6 owners are considering their options, Rubacky said. In the meantime, Rubacky plans to hold a meeting with residents of adjacent communities next week. “We will listen to them and convey what we’re doing,” Rubacky said. “We’re trying to do the right thing by the local community.” |
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