Her Dream Was To Open a Vegan Tattoo Shop. Zoning Officials Shut Her Down.
"It's a lot to try and put this stuff all together all on my own, using my own savings, and then having to start all over," says Venus Vegan Tattoo owner Selena Carrion.

Zoning officials in the Chicago suburb of Orland Park, Illinois, have shut down a woman's eco-conscious tattoo parlor after determining that she didn't meet the village's voluminous requirements for opening a body art establishment.
The decision has forced Selena Carrion to walk away from a shop she'd sunk considerable time and money into right before her planned opening.
"I'm the first businessowner in my family," she tells Reason. "It's a lot to try and put this stuff all together all on my own, using my own savings, and then having to start all over."
Carrion's plan had been to combine her twin passions for animal welfare and body artistry into a new business venture: Venus Vegan Tattoos.
She'd long been interested in art and had used the pandemic to learn the particulars of tattooing with an eye toward opening her own business. She'd also become an active member of the Chicago area's vegan scene, and had nursed the idea of opening a tattoo shop that used animal- and plastic-free inks.
In December 2021, her friend alerted Carrion to a newly vacant business suite in the Chicago suburb of Orland Park. In early 2022, she signed a lease for the space and set to work preparing it—painting, patching holes in the walls, retiling surfaces. Carrion estimates she spent $10,000 of her own money plus a $20,000 business loan getting everything ready. She also registered her business as a limited liability company and obtained a body art permit from the state.
Everything was all set for Venus Vegan's grand opening. But in mid-April, shortly after Carrion hosted a launch party at her business, Orland Park officials slapped a notice on her door shutting her down.
Her lease explicitly said a tattoo parlor was allowed on-site, according to CBS News Chicago.
But in subsequent phone calls with town zoning officials, Carrion was told that her business was not in fact allowed in the property's "Village Center District" zoning. Had she wanted to open a gym, day care, dry cleaner, or medical office, that would have been permissible. But not a tattoo shop.
That sent Carrion looking for alternative locations in Orland Park, which proved fruitless. Carrion said one property owner didn't want to rent to a tattoo shop. One was outside of her price range. Another only rented to businesses with established locations.
Even if she'd found a suitable location and a person willing to lease to her in one of Orland Park's two zoning districts where tattoo parlors are allowed, getting the special use permit from the village that's required to legally open would have been a challenge.
A public information officer for the village told Reason in an email that getting this permit requires the applicant to submit a development petition which is then reviewed by planning staff before being forwarded to the planning commission which will hold a public hearing on the application. That's followed by another public hearing before the Village Board. The board then would decide whether to pass an ordinance issuing the permit for the tattoo shop.
Carrion says village staff told her it would take at least three months to go through this entire process. Rather than go through all that time and effort, which came with no guarantee her business would be approved, Carrion had decided to move her business to less regulated Chicago.
In addition to the $30,000 she spent on fixing up her place, Carrion says she has also lost $20,000 worth of revenue from canceled appointments. She's currently negotiating with her landlord about withdrawing from her lease.
"It was a lot of hurdles that were not allowing me here," she says of Orland Park. "They were making it pretty much impossible to get a tattoo shop."
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Vegan Tattoo Shop
A what?!!
Yeah, who eats their tattoos?
I read the article... I guess inks can contain animal products? Who knew?
I was wondering about the "plastic-free" part as well. Are plastics considered non-vegan now or is that part of the separate scare we're having about microplastics and such now.
She is so eco-conscious she reuses the same needle to have 0 waste
It would certainly help Eco-Wackos purge the Planet of humans.
Plastic is a petroleum product. Won't someone think of the dinosaurs?
Ya beat me to it! Good job!!!
Super-fine plastic particles make very durable tattoo inks. I think it's pretty standard these days. I'd guess that they are probably also less biologically active than some more "natural" dyes and pigments.
It's glycerin. Tattoo inks contain animal products the way soap contains animal products... or vape juice contains animal and tobacco products.
More importantly, I now I know that I have fewer animal product specters permanently embedded under my skin than many vegans.
Doesn't matter how vegan the ink is. The tattoo is still going to be drawn on meat.
Can vegans eat themselves?
With a lot of yoga practice, maybe.
They can certainly bbq themselves.
Too soon!
Yeah. Must reach an internal temperature of at least 175F to be considered done.
You can ink a vegetable.
Sounds like, quite possibly, the most annoying tattoo shop conceivable.
^This. The insufferability of this place is turned to 11.
wants to open business in Chicago and *did not* grease proper wheels first?
No, read again. She tried to open in a suburb, and is now trying again in "less regulated" Chicago.
greater Chicago but yes you are technically correct.
the Philly Family extended into suburban New Jersey. trust me.
Yeah, Cook County is still, definitively, Chicagoland. Not to say villages in collar counties won't have similar regs but, there's a considerable aspect of her not having done her homework here.
>>not having done her homework here.
word.
*rubbing my temples*
So, I really don't like it that this woman is going through this struggle. Really I don't. But pretty much 100% of the regulatory hurdles that she's struggling with came from a left-of-center ideology. Environmental reviews, planning commission petitions and public comment period-- all of that was built on the notion of protecting the environment and getting democratic, equity and community input on your activity.
So all I can really say is, the next time you start thinking about opening up an econ-conscious, sustainable, animal and plastic-free business, look back on all the stuff you've been voting for and supporting up until that moment, and that'll give you some idea of how many landmines are in the field you're about to cross.
This.
"Certified animal-free" but didn't bother to get "certified zoning permit."
Her lease explicitly said a tattoo parlor was allowed on-site, according to CBS News Chicago.
I mean... does she have any recourse against the landlord that made a false representation?
Not that she shouldn't have done the paperwork before sinking a whole fuck ton of money into the place, but, that seems like a fairly large error.
Yeah, I'd be curious to see her thoughts. A difficult things with libertarianism is that you tend to get folks who are libertarian for me not for thee. Even moreso, you get people who are libertarian when they're specifically dealing with something that frustrates them, but they then forget about pretty quickly.
It's why everyone bitches about the DMV, but nothing is ever really done about it. It's just too infrequent of an issue, so one just suffers through it.
> But pretty much 100% of the regulatory hurdles that she's struggling with came from a left-of-center ideology.
Nope, not really. Plenty of right-of-center locales have similarly inane hurdles. Bureaucracy knows to partisan boundaries. People who get power tend to exercise that power. This isn't whataboutism, it's reality. Bureaucrats love petty rules. When given the opportunity to enact more petty rules they will.
The idea that right-of-center governments are bureaucracy free is rather silly. I mean, just go look at how prevalent hairstylist licensing requirements are in the South. A region I'm guessing skews towards the right-of-center. I've had my own run-ins with this level of bureaucratic nonsense in in right-of-center towns in the past, where obscure and picayune rules were pulled out to justify blocking a new business that the city powers didn't want existing for some reason.
Besides, a tattoo parlour, no matter how vegan and progressive, is usually seen by the culturally conservative as a business that would attract the less than upright to the premises. Ditto for massage parlours and head shops. So the idea that right-of-center places would be more friendly to such establishments is, quite frankly, bizarre.
This is really false equivalence. Start a business in San Francisco, measure the number of hurdles an opposition you run into.
Start a business in Jackson, Tennessee, measure the number of hurdles and opposition you run into.
Of course there are bureaucratic hurdles in every municipality and state in the land. But in scope and measure, left-leaning cities are far and away much more hostile than right-leaning ones.
To be fair, there's no way my GOP burb lets her open a tattoo shop on the town square, either.
Now do the same with a vegan tattoo parlour.
This is really false equivalence.
At several levels. Sure, Conservatives oppose putting strip clubs, bars, and casinos right next to schools, day cares, and churches. The people attending the Church and sending their kids to daycare don't want to have to stumble over drunk hookers. But, only progressives would require a environmental impact hearings like an unchecked spate of tatttoo parlors in their village is going to level the rainforests and put the nearest gas refinery plant/strip mine to shame.
Conflating regulations of a huge metropolitan urban center with those of a tiny, rural town is disingenuous. Of COURSE there are far more hurdles in the large city vs small town precisely b/c there are far more opportunities for "bad" business practices to evolve.
Look into all occupational licensing, business permits, and so on, and you will find the vast majority were Progressive initiatives, begun after the Civil War to keep freed slaves from taking white jobs. The first federal minimum wage laws began under FDR to keep southern blacks from taking northern white jobs.
Progressivism is racist to its core.
Not true. Their intentions have changed along with their understanding of economics.
When they were racist they understood (correctly) that raising the price floor on labor would price unskilled (black) workers out of a job.
Now that they're not racist anymore they understand (incorrectly) that raising the minimum wage gives unskilled (black) workers a raise.
They're not racist anymore. They're just willfully ignorant of basic economics.
No. They are still racist. See any Democrat commentary regarding a minority conservative.
I think you missed my point. They support policies born in racism that harm minorities, but they now sell the policies as helping instead of harming. So while they claim to not be racist, their actions still harm those they claim to help. I was pointing out the disconnect between their actions and their stated intentions.
No. They are still openly racist. As I stated above.
They worked on segregation for 100 years. They finally got self segregation. And they openly attack minority conservatives with racist statements.
Look, I get it. You fall for the narrative. You refuse to acknowledge it. And you think fighting against it is wrong.
Grow the fuck up.
So all I can really say is, the next time you start thinking about opening up an econ-conscious, sustainable, animal and plastic-free business, look back on all the stuff you've been voting for and supporting up until that moment, and that'll give you some idea of how many landmines are in the field you're about to cross.
Also, unless you just woke up from the 1920s, sinking money into your business location without even consulting the village is an incredibly stupid move. Not to say it *should* be that way but that's the way it is and the reasons for it are very valid.
*Some* of the reasons for it are very valid.
Had no idea tattoos used animal byproducts. Learn something new every day.
You'd think that an ink that had animal products in it would be absorbed into the skin.
On a side note, if one could come up with a non-permanent or easily reversible tattoo ink, you'd be a bloody trillionaire.
Magnetic ink. Looks great, and is easily removed with an MRI...
Might be easy but, wow, that sounds painful.
But the pain, like the beauty, is only skin deep.
It's the escape scene from the beginning of X-Men 2.
On a side note, if one could come up with a non-permanent or easily reversible tattoo ink, you'd be a bloody trillionaire.
Pretty sure that between Sharpies and acupuncture, the market's saturated. You could probably eek out a living as an artisan with sharpie or henna ink.
Interesting idea for Carrion to tell Orland Park they're infringing on her religious rights.
Ackshuyally, there is Mehedi and Henna tattoo media which disappear with time and washing, as well as computer-printable temporary tattoo sheets.
Don't know how lucrative they are versus permanent tattoos, but in the age of the Surveillance State, temporary tattoos make much more sense. If you're gonna decorate you body, at least do it in a way that lets you switch up your look.
"Her lease explicitly said "
not a zoning permit
"Carrion said one property owner didn't want to rent to a tattoo shop. One was outside of her price range. Another only rented to businesses with established locations."
Private business making private decisions.
If she wants to be a vegan she should really change her name.
That's some pretty strong meat there about irony. 😉
What color was everyone’s skin?
What do they do with their cocks and vaginas?
If you have to ask...
"Do you have Prince Albert in a can?..." 🙂
Nothing about this says "tattoo parlor."
https://codelibrary.amlegal.com/codes/orlandpark/latest/orlandpark_il_ldc/0-0-0-2908
Incentivize Code Conformance.
The Village shall reward those who strive to meet its standards and regulations. Therefore, the length of review time and number of meetings required to obtain project approval shall be based upon the degree of conformance to this Code, with precise conformance resulting in a relatively quick review process.
D. Development Objectives.
1. Interconnected Site Planning.
Buildings shall be (1) located at the street edge and clustered together with (2) shared parking facilities and (3) common amenity space, including (4) regional stormwater detention facilities.
2. Life Between Buildings.
The defining quality and character of the District shall be the campus feel created through a network of (5) public plazas and open space areas. The spaces between buildings shall flow together and provide visual and physical connections for pedestrians.
3. Pedestrian Experience.
Sidewalks and pathways are required to (6) connect the street frontage to all front building entrances, parking areas, plazas, and any other destination that generates pedestrian traffic.
4. Mix of Development Intensity.
The vast majority of the District shall have no height limit, thereby encouraging more intense development (7) appropriate next to an interstate. Development of (8) low- and (9) medium-intensity structures will be encouraged to co-locate and share common areas.
5. Target Knowledge-Based Industries.
A broad spectrum of users are encouraged to congregate within the District - office, retail, multi-family, entertainment, and recreation - with a special emphasis on knowledge-intens ive sectors, such as Class A office, research labs, advanced manufacturing (3D printing), and business incubator facilities.
Actually, it does. Here's the link to the regulation around midex use campuses, and it specifically bans tattoo parlors: https://ecode360.com/37449489?highlight=tattoo&searchId=11309305774688634#37449489
You know, I remember quite a few years ago, Reason (old Reason, may she rest in peas) did an article about a woman who had a small craft toy business and ran smack into the Consumer Protection Bureau. Her business was being murdered by bullshit lead paint regulations-- even though she didn't use any lead paint. But she had to PROVE she wasn't using lead paint and given how she produced toys was literally going to mean the end of her business. She noted that she was a life-long, liberal Democrat, but found it "curious" that when she tried to get meetings with Congressional representatives, the only ones that would even answer the phone were the Republicans.
Be careful what you vote for.
I found it. 2009. The obscure-assed shit I remember...
Weird alliance indeed.
I remember that one too. Basically made it impossible for anyone who isn't a big corporation to get into the children's toy business.
The current philosopher-king of the Do It Yourself (DIY) movement is Dale Dougherty, editor and founder of Make and Craft magazines. Dougherty, 53, says of Make: "Behind what we do is an ethic—we don't wear it on our sleeve—of anti-consumerism." Yet that's not the same as anti-capitalism. As many small producers told me, in so many words, "How could I be against global capitalism? I just sold something to a person in Australia."
By, that's a fight you're losin', ain't it sister?
Consumption is the point of production. So what can anti-consumerism be other than anti-capitalism?
Personal preference? I'm not much of a consumer and I find a lot of contemporary consumer culture fairly distasteful, but I'm definitely a very strong pro-capitalist.
You don't try to push your preferences on others.
Yeah, I guess I'm more non-consumerist, not anti-consumerist.
Consumption is the point of production. So what can anti-consumerism be other than anti-capitalism?
Before making broad, sweeping macroeconomic statements, it's probably best to have even a passing awareness of the service industry.
Take it up with Adam Smith. He said “Consumption is the sole purpose of all production.” Also, don't services have value?
Uh, I don't know what you think Adam Smith was saying with that comment, but it wasn't "Consumption is the only means by which people expend capital and production the only means by which they gain it." and the notion that capital is rigidly fixed to production runs rather directly counter to many of his other theses, including the "invisible hand".
Also, don't services have value?
I'm not the one who said "what can anti-consumerism be other than anti-capitalism?"
I remember reading that story.
It's interesting to see what stories Reason tends to cover. I have no issue with this one on its face, deregulation is very important. That it's a vegan tattooist in Chicago and not one of the hundreds/thousands/millions of cases like this elsewhere is very on brand.
Venus Flytrap Bites Dog!
A former landlord's maintenance employees told me that it was cheaper to install unnecessary carbon monoxide detectors in hundreds of units than to go through the process to prove they were not needed.
Can I force her to tattoo a deer being butchered for consumption.
Asking for a baker friend.
*lmao*
Just getting any old deer leg tattooed and not just the one you serve at your wedding? You. Classless. Fuck.
Seriously, if I thought I could pull it off with a straight face, I would go in with the phrase "same sex wedding deer leg".
I want genderqueer sausage links. I feel it's inclusive to all species involved.
So the lesson, boys and girls, is that you don't sign the lease until the bribes have been distributed and the checks have cleared.
Check the zoning laws yourself. Don't trust the landlord.
I think that landlord gets his properties repaired for free that way.
I just did. In that district, a tattoo business seems to be neither permitted, prohibited, nor special (discretionary).
But "personal service establishments" (not defined within), closest category mentioned in that district, are permitted. Other districts mention tattoo parlors, but not the one where her office space was.
I'd've liked links to sources. How'd you get this story? Mainly what I'm interested in is the text of the zoning ordinance. Does it name individual types of businesses?
So I looked it up myself at https://ecode360.com/37449396 , where tattooing is not mentioned in the Village Center District, but "Personal service establishments" is listed as a Permitted Use. Tattooing is listed as a Special Use in the BIZ district and a Prohibited Use in the Regional Mixed-Use Campus.
It is up to the prospective business owner to check local zoning laws before you dump lots of money into a project. Yes zoning commonly sucks, but you need to do your homework first, not complain after.
Ah, the irony of a Vegan named Carrion. PETA picked a peck of putrefaction.
I support zoning these shops. Saw far too many cases of Hep in the military caused by horribly run parlours. They can be a public health menace. No ideology necessary to understand their negative impact in a neighbourhood.
How does zoning something out of sight fix sanitation issues in the -
Oh, you just want them out of sight is all. Democrat, gotcha.
Fuck you. This woman was robbed.
-jcr
It's not hard to understand why someone named Carrion might have a strong aversion to dead animals but the vegetative mental state of vegan social entrepreneurs lends credence to the idea that you are what you eat.
Tattooing is neck and neck with dentistry in the Most Sadistic Profession race, and if Veganism is serious about kindness to creatures Vegan Tattooists should limit themselves to tattooing vegetables.
I enjoyed most of my tattoos. Aside from when they cross over bone they felt like a warm massage. Top of shoulder was excruciating. Knuckles went numb years ago.
The Atlas Shrugged Amendment calls on Congress to set a good example by laying off of pointing guns at production and trade. We could have that in the LP platform. Instead, the LNC demands that child shooter Nikolas Cruz be protected from hanging by forcing taxpayers to pay for his room and board--and bodyguards. This helps explain why our 2016 vote count is falling and states want us off the ballot.