BLAME ‘EM ALL, BUT NOT THE VENDOR

by | Feb 25, 2009 | Detroit Free Press | 0 comments

I once worked at a football stadium. I sold programs. I was 14. Before the game, I lined up with the other vendors, including the guys who sold beer. They had to be older, of course, but they still trudged through the stands, like me, hoping for customers.

At the end of the day, like me, they pocketed, in cash, a small percentage of what they brought in. And they went home, many via bus or subway.

They were nice guys, but not men — and I say this politely — whom I would necessarily entrust with life and death decisions. Apparently, that is now their role. At least it was last week, when a New Jersey jury awarded $135 million in damages to the family of a 7-year-old girl who was paralyzed in a drunken-driving accident involving a football fan.

The fan, Daniel Lanzaro, drank six large beers during a 1999 game at Giants Stadium, beers he purchased from a vendor who took a $10 tip from Lanzaro to ignore the stadium’s two-beer-at-a-time limit. This is hardly new, by the way. When I worked in stadiums, vendors did all kinds of things for cash tips.

Anyhow, Lanzaro was drunk, more than twice the legal limit for driving, when he got in his car. The family sued him, but he didn’t have much. It sued the concessionaire, Aramark, which had a lot.

And it won.

They can’t walk a straight line

“Hopefully this will make a difference at arenas across the country,” said David Mazie, the lawyer for the family.

That would be nice. But it’s a lie — unless they outlaw alcohol at stadiums altogether.

Otherwise, people will get drunk. They will buy their two beers. And they will give money to others to buy them four more. Or they’ll get in a different line. Or they’ll bribe somebody. Or they’ll drink in the parking lot before the game.

It is silly to think that vendors, in a stadium stuffed with 70,000 screaming fans, can play a beer-soaked Solomon and tell fans “no.”

For one thing, football is played in the winter, which means fans are often bundled up with scarves, hats, sunglasses, even ski masks. Is a vendor supposed to ask every one of them to look him in the eye and recite the alphabet?

Plus, everyone gets drunk differently. I know people who can pound six beers and appear sober enough to go to church.

They still don’t belong behind the wheel.

There’s too much time for drinking

Which of course is where this all begins. Lanzaro, 34, was the one who got in his vehicle. He’s the one responsible. But you can’t change a culture by sending one drunk to jail.

So while Lanzaro serves five years for vehicular aggravated assault — and until we make drunken driving a more serious crime, nothing will change — the family and their lawyers went after bigger fish. And they got one. The case hinged partly on the training of the vendors to recognize drunkenness.

Now, some say $135 million in damages is an argument for tort reform, especially since attorneys typically pocket a third of that.

But making this a case about greedy lawyers is to miss the point on many levels. It’s ignoring the little girl, her family and, most of all, the sick yet slick relationship that alcohol has formed with sports, suggesting that you can’t enjoy the latter without the former.

The NFL cuts off beers sales after the third quarter. What a joke. If you can’t get drunk by the third quarter, you’re not worth a case of beer, anyhow. And with tailgating, which is hailed as some great American tradition when it is simply, for many, getting plastered in a parking lot, it almost doesn’t matter how much beer is served. People enter the turnstiles inebriated.

Either your stadium goes dry, or people will leave drunk. I have little sympathy for a multi-billion company like Aramark and endless sympathy for the girl and her family, but the one person I know you can’t tag this on is the poor guy who’s trying to make a few bucks selling whatever they give him to sell at the stadium. Trust me, if our lives are in his hands, we’re all in trouble.

Contact MITCH ALBOM at 313-223-4581 or albom@freepress.com”

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Mitch Albom writes about running an orphanage in impoverished Port-au-Prince, Haiti, his kids, their hardships, laughs and challenges, and the life lessons he’s learned there every day.

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