Sen. Dodd looks to expand to-go cocktail law

The newly proposed bill would include bars, and remove a pandemic requirement that customers also buy food with their alcohol.|

Sen. Bill Dodd (D-Napa) is hoping to make to-go cocktails an option for more California businesses. New legislation proposed on Feb. 15 would broaden parts of his 2021 law that permitted the sale and delivery of pre-mixed alcoholic beverages.

“Allowing flexibility to sell to-go cocktails was a lifeline to restaurants and bars during the pandemic,” Sen. Dodd said. “To keep up the momentum during the recovery, we must expand this successful provision in ways that will make sense and be beneficial to all. My new proposal gives a boost to these small businesses and our local economy, helping to keep doors open and people employed.”

Two years ago, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Dodd’s Senate Bill 389, which allowed the sale of to-go alcoholic beverages as part of take-out restaurant food orders. It came as restaurants nationwide recovered from hundreds of billions of dollars in losses sustained because of lockdowns and social distancing requirements to stop the spread of coronavirus.

This year’s bill, SB 495, expands the previous legislation in important ways, removing a prior requirement that food must also be purchased with alcohol. It also extends the carry-out cocktail provision to bars, which also have been hard-hit by the pandemic. In addition, it allows for the delivery of to-go cocktails from both types of businesses. Finally, the bill increases oversight of alcohol delivery by Alcohol Beverage Control to prevent underage drinking.

“Sen. Dodd has stepped up once again for California’s restaurant community at a time of when food costs, a labor shortage, mounting debt and supply chain delays are forcing restaurants to reduce operating hours, limit menu offerings or close altogether,” said Matt Sutton, senior vice president of government affairs and public policy for the California Restaurant Association. “For his efforts we are incredibly grateful.”

SB 495 was introduced Feb. 14 and is eligible for its first committee hearing and vote next month.

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