Boston Herald

Councilor wants border-to-border booze

Baker measure would add 150 liquor licenses specific to neighborho­ods

- By SEAN PHILIP COTTER

A new bill would give Boston up to 150 new liquor licenses earmarked for businesses in the outlying neighborho­ods that have increasing­ly fewer local watering holes.

“It gives us as a city the ability to look at economic opportunit­ies for different neighborho­ods,” City Councilor Frank Baker, who’s introducin­g the bill on Wednesday, told the Herald.

The bill would allow Boston to issue up to 150 new nontransfe­rable licenses from 2021 to 2023. All would revert back to the city if restaurant­s go under.

The city’s Licensing Board specifical­ly could issue up to 15 licenses each for Dorchester, Roxbury, Mattapan, Hyde Park, Allston/ Brighton, Roslindale, South Boston, West Roxbury, Charlestow­n and East Boston.

Baker, who represents Dorchester, repeated the common frustratio­n in the city’s outlying neighborho­ods: that the huge price tags restaurate­urs are willing to pay to buy the existing liquor licenses to open swanky new digs downtown or in the Seaport have led to many local watering holes selling their licenses and closing up shop. It’s also hard, he said, for anyone looking to open up a new restaurant in Dorchester or Mattapan to do so if they would have to pay half a million dollars just to get the license.

“This is for the local entreprene­ur,” Baker said.

City officials have pushed for more licenses for years. Before she became a congresswo­man, then-City

Councilor Ayanna Pressley in 2014 led the charge for 75 licenses for the areas outside of downtown, though some of the neighborho­ods in question didn’t end up getting many of them, as there were no neighborho­od-by-neighborho­od restrictio­ns. Mayor Martin Walsh has sought more licenses in the years since, introducin­g a proposal himself last year that would add licenses.

This bill is a home-rule petition, which means it would need council approval and the mayor’s signature before requiring passage by the Legislatur­e and the governor’s sign-off. Beacon Hill is often unwilling to pass home-rule petitions, but Baker said he’s optimistic that the fact that this issue has percolated for years — and that Boston has a strong delegation — would help get this bill over the hump.

 ?? ANGELA ROWLINGS / HERALD STAFF FILE ?? LOCAL EFFECT: Councilor Frank Baker says additional liquor licenses would benefit the Hub’s outlying neighborho­ods.
ANGELA ROWLINGS / HERALD STAFF FILE LOCAL EFFECT: Councilor Frank Baker says additional liquor licenses would benefit the Hub’s outlying neighborho­ods.

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