South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

A deal is on tap for Florida ‘alcohol to go’

- By Jim Turner

TALLAHASSE­E — Florida lawmakers appear ready to give final approval to a restaurant industry-backed measure that would make permanent a practice of allowing alcoholic drinks to be included with take-home meals.

The House and Senate have reached a compromise on a bill (SB 148) that would include limits on restaurant­s that can sell alcoholic drinks with take-home and delivery orders, Senate sponsor Jennifer Bradley, R-Fleming Island, said Wednesday.

Gov. Ron DeSantis last spring issued an executive order that included so-called “alcohol to go” to help restaurant­s forced to scale back operations in the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. He has endorsed making the rule permanent.

“This amendment [the compromise] will codify the existing executive order and allow food establishm­ents in Florida to sell mixed-drink beverages with takeout and delivery food orders,” Bradley said.

The agreement, which drew unanimous support Wednesday from the Senate, would cut off the sale of to-go drinks — mixed or in bottles — when restaurant­s’ scheduled food service ends for the day or at midnight, whichever occurs first.

Drinks would need to be placed in secured containers and placed in locked compartmen­ts, vehicle trunks or in areas behind the last upright seats in vehicles. Restaurant­s would be prohibited from including alcoholic drinks in orders being delivered by people under age

21.

The to-go option would be available to restaurant­s that have special alcoholic-beverage licenses and derive at least 51% of revenue from food and non-alcoholic sales. For restaurant­s with regular “quota” licenses, food and non-alcoholic drinks would have to account for

60% of the orders.

“The Senate’s goal has always been to capture true food-service establishm­ents, and I believe this compromise does that,” Bradley said.

With the legislativ­e session ending Friday, the bill will go back to the House, which passed an earlier version by a 115-1 vote on April 14.

The proposal has the backing of a coalition of influentia­l business groups.

Florida Restaurant & Lodging Associatio­n General Counsel Samantha Padgett told lawmakers in February the proposed legislatio­n offered a “lifeline” for restaurant­s.

“This is an issue of survival. The hospitalit­y industry has been devastated by the pandemic,” Padgett said. “Some restaurant­s have closed, and they may never come back. For many that are hanging on and hanging in, alcohol to go has made all the difference.”

 ?? PHIL COALE/AP ?? Brittany Callens, a bartender at the Leon Pub, draws a beer from one of the many taps at the bar in Tallahasse­e in 2009. Legislator­s are considerin­g a measure that would allow restaurant­s to include alcoholic drinks with take-out orders.
PHIL COALE/AP Brittany Callens, a bartender at the Leon Pub, draws a beer from one of the many taps at the bar in Tallahasse­e in 2009. Legislator­s are considerin­g a measure that would allow restaurant­s to include alcoholic drinks with take-out orders.

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