The opening of the controversial venue Hooters has been pushed back to later this year.
‘Complex’ negotiations with a landlord have delayed the opening of the restaurant and bar, which has been branded ‘sexist’, in Salford Quays.
The boss behind the Hooters restaurant and bar – famous for its revealing uniforms – says it could now be the middle or the end of the year before its new outlet can open.
Julian Mills, who has run the Nottingham Hooters for the last 21 years, said that negotiations with the landlord of 3 Capital Quay were ‘coming to an end’.
The licence for Hooters was granted by Salford City Council in June in face of 91 objections and opposition from its own Mayor Paul Dennett, Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham and Salford MPs Rebecca Long-Bailey and Barbara Keeley.
Mr Mills said he was ‘confident’ the new Hooters bar would open some time this year, telling the Local Democracy Reporting Service: “We thought getting the licence would be much more difficult than getting the deal done with the landlord, but it has been the other way round.
“It’s no-one’s fault that it’s taken so long, but we are hoping to get it done within the next three or four weeks. It’s a bit like buying a house, but multiplied by a factor of 50, in terms of the complexity of the negotiations.”
Mr Mills said that once the agreement with the landlord had been signed and there were ‘boots on the ground’ it would take four-to-five months to launch the Salford Hooters, saying: “We are intending to employ between 50 and 60 people, but we haven’t advertised yet because we don’t know exactly when we are opening.”
At the time the licence for Hooters was granted, chairman of the licensing panel, Councillor John Warmisham said the city council was ‘required by law to process a premises licence application’, saying: “The process is set out in legislation and government guidance. The decision to grant or refuse a premises licence application or the imposition of any conditions must be within the parameters of the licensing objectives.
“Opinion and personal choice are not relevant or legitimate reasons to refuse an application.”
Some organisations which voiced objections to the granting of the licence included: Male Allies Challenging Sexism, the Women’s Equality Party, Yes Matters, FiLia, Womanchester and GM4 Women.