Alaska Senate Approves Update of Alcohol Industry Rules
February 27, 2020
“With a primary focus on public health and safety, SB 52 provides clarity for licensees, local governments, law enforcement and the public, and will result in the common-sense, consistent and less burdensome regulation of Alaska’s alcoholic beverage industry,” said Senator Peter Micciche, R-Soldotna, the bill’s sponsor. Micciche said, “SB 52 is the product of an eight-year, unprecedented collaboration of over 100 stakeholders from a diverse group of public health and safety entities, legislators, alcohol industry representatives, local governments, advocates for youth and the public who collectively volunteered over 13,000 hours and testified extensively to effectively improve the effort. It will modernize and reorganize the 35-year-old hodge-podge of Alaska’s alcohol laws into a comprehensive, effective Title 4 re-write.” Stakeholders established shared goals as the foundation for developing recommendations and those objectives resulted in the following:
After years of impasse, stakeholders recently agreed to a “grand compromise” in a few key areas: The bill reduces restrictions on breweries by extending the time tasting rooms can be open from 8 p.m. until 10 p.m.; it expands lawful activities by allowing venues to host up to four live music concerts per year; and it sets clear rules in place for fundraisers, brewery tours and art shows in statute, not in in regulation where they were subject to uncertainty. Senate Bill 52 passed the Senate by a vote of 19-0 and is now on its way to the Alaska House of Representatives for consideration.
On the Web: Edited By Mary Kauffman, SitNews
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