Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

People in parts of 2 cities to vote on old alcohol ban

- JAKE SANDLIN

The cities of Jacksonvil­le and Sherwood — which want to expand economic developmen­t opportunit­ies— have jointly campaigned to overturn an alcohol ban from about 60 years ago during a special election scheduled for today.

Eligible people will be asked to vote for or against the sale of alcoholic beverages and on-premises consumptio­n within the defunct Gray Township voting district that overlaps Sherwood and Jacksonvil­le.

Polls will be open from 7:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m. today.

There are an estimated 23,920 eligible voters in the former Gray Township election area that includes most of Jacksonvil­le, the portion of Sherwood north of Maryland Avenue and a smaller part of unincorpor­ated Pulaski County.

Each city’s election is independen­t of the other, meaning the issue could pass in one and fail in the other, or both could pass or fail.

Having the alcohol ban has restricted the two cities, Jacksonvil­le especially, from attracting new restaurant­s, Jacksonvil­le Mayor Gary Fletcher has said. In Sherwood, alcohol sales are allowed in the part of the city south of Maryland Avenue.

Fletcher said recently that the prohibitio­n on bythe-drink sales “really limits our ability when it comes to economic developmen­t, especially in attracting national chain restaurant­s.” When potential restaurant­s discover that alcohol sales are not allowed in most of the city, “it’s like a wall goes up,” he said.

“We’re the same way,” Marcia Cook, executive director for the Sherwood Chamber of Commerce, said

of the affected area of Sherwood.

During the 1950s, voters in the now-defunct Gray Township approved the ban on alcohol. That prohibitio­n still exists, even though many such voting districts were abolished across Pulaski County in the 1980s.

The measure, if it passes, would allow on-premises, by-the-drink alcohol sales at restaurant­s. A ban on liquor stores, bars and clubs within the township’s limits would remain even if the measure passes. Grocery stores and gas stations still wouldn’t be able to legally sell wine or beer.

With the passage of Act 144 in the most recent legislativ­e session, the ability for cities to do away with their “dry” sections became more feasible. The act, co-sponsored by state Rep. Bob Johnson, D-Jacksonvil­le, allows city councils to call elections to change their alcohol laws.

A previous state law required petitioner­s to gather signatures from 15 percent of the electorate in order to hold a special election related to alcohol consumptio­n. Attempts to reach the required number of petition signatures in the old Gray Township in 2013 and 2015 both failed.

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette ??
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States