The first time I spoke to Tom Preston about his work he told me, “There is no typical customer anymore. It makes no sense for a city to spend money trying to keep out a legitimate business from which it could be collecting taxes. The judge sent the issue back to the council to reconsider its decision. Last week, a Maricopa County Superior Court judge said that the Tempe council had improperly revoked the permit that the Prestons had been granted to open their studio. “In taking this case we want to emphasize that the law is meant to treat everyone equally and not to be politicized by folks who are basing their decisions on old, worn-out stereotypes,” Bolick said. Publications throughout the country have done articles about how tattoo studios seem to be one of the few “recession-proof” businesses. One exhibitor told The Republic, “Can you believe it, with this economy we still are going to have more than 3,000 people here today? This really is the ‘people’s art’ and the people are here today to prove how much they like it.” The Pew Research Center did a study recently and reported that 36 percent of those ages 18 to 25, and 40 percent of those 26 to 40, have at least one tattoo.Įarlier this month, thousands attended the ninth annual Arizona Tattoo Expo at the Mesa Convention Center. The owner of a plumbing business located near the proposed tattoo parlor told the council, “It’s going to look like another skid row if we let this kind of business come in.” The Prestons have operated for 14 years and have a clean record.Īnd while Tempe city employees charged with granting permits to business owners sided with the Prestons, the shop was opposed by the North Tempe Neighborhood Association. It all started when Tom and Elizabeth Preston, owners of the Virtual Reality tattoo studio in Mesa, decided to set up a new shop in a Tempe strip mall on Scottsdale Road. “It’s a shame that the council members in this case are reluctant to see that.” “Times have changed,” said Clint Bolick, director of the Goldwater Institute’s Scharf-Norton Center for Constitutional Litigation. The enterprising couple being represented by the conservative Goldwater Institute in their fight against the Tempe City Council are the owners of a mainstream business: A tattoo parlor. Something with a headline like, “Right-wing think tank comes to the aid of left-wing business.” A few years back I might have been able to put a wacky spin on this story.
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