§ 7-2-9 APPROVAL OF APPLICATION.
   (a)   No license shall be granted for operation on any premises or with any equipment for which taxes, assessments, forfeitures, or other financial claims of the village are delinquent and unpaid.
   (b)   No license shall be issued unless the premises conform to the sanitary, safety, and health requirements of the State Building Code, and the regulations of the State Board of Health and local Board of Health applicable to restaurants. The premises must be properly lighted and ventilated, must be equipped with separate sanitary toilet and lavatory facilities equipped with running water for each sex and must conform to all ordinances of the village.
   (c)   Consideration for the granting or denial of a license will be based on:
      (1)   Arrest and conviction record of the applicant, subject to the limitations imposed by Wis. Stats. §§ 111.321,111.322, and 111.335;
      (2)   The financial responsibility of the applicant;
      (3)   The appropriateness of the location and the premises where the licensed business is to be conducted; and
      (4)   Generally, the applicant’s fitness for the trust to be reposed.
   (d)   An application may be denied based upon the applicant’s arrest and conviction record if the applicant has been convicted of a felony (unless duly pardoned) or if the applicant has habitually been a law offender. For purposes of this licensing procedure, HABITUALLY BEEN A LAW OFFENDER is generally considered to be an arrest or conviction of at least two offenses which are substantially related to the licensed activity within the five years immediately preceding the license application. Because a license is a privilege, the issuance of which is a right granted solely to the Village Board, the Village Board reserves the right to consider the severity, and facts and circumstances of the offense when making the determination to grant, deny, or not renew a license. Further, the Board, at its discretion, may, based upon an arrest or conviction record of two or more offenses which are substantially related to the licensed activity within the five years immediately preceding, act to suspend such license for a period of one year or more.
(Prior Code, § 7-2-9)