Chattanooga Times Free Press

House OKs bill allowing liquor sales on Sundays

- BY JEFFREY COLLINS

COLUMBIA, S.C. — The South Carolina House has given key approval to a bill allowing liquor stores to stay open on Sundays for a few hours if their local government­s allow it.

Supporters said it is time to update antiquated, centurieso­ld rules based on religion that designated Sunday as a day of rest. They said it would help businesses — especially those frequented by tourists who spend well more than $20 billion annually in South Carolina and who are sometimes surprised to find they can’t get a bottle of tequila or rum on a summer beach day.

The House voted 68-44 for the bill, with most of the no votes coming from the most conservati­ve Republican­s and a few rural Democrats. The proposal faces one more routine approval vote before it heads to the Senate. It would join another bill which would allow customers to pick up alcohol when they get their groceries or food order brought out to them in the parking lot.

The bill would allow liquor stores to open from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday if a county or city council agrees to put the idea up for a public vote and it gets a majority approval.

“We understand this is not a theocracy. We are not a church,” said Republican Rep. Gil Gatch from Summervill­e, who is a lawyer and a former pastor. “Last time I checked, less restrictiv­e government is one of the big tenets conservati­ves stand for.”

South Carolina was long a bastion of blue laws to prevent people from having to work on Sundays but the demands of a modern society began to chip away at the rules. First, gas stations could open on Sundays — and then restaurant­s and grocery stores followed, which left retailers like Walmart to wall off the clothing and general merchandis­e sections with grocery carts.

By the 1990s as South Carolina attracted internatio­nal companies like BMW, new residents and employees put pressure on the state to open more things and most of the blue laws faded away. But liquor stores have remained closed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States