Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Outdoor drinking on tap for city’s downtown

- STACY RYBURN Stacy Ryburn can be reached by email at sryburn@nwadg.com or on Twitter @stacyrybur­n.

FAYETTEVIL­LE — The city is planning to activate outdoor drinking zones next week.

Beginning Wednesday, people will be able to buy drinks on the go as they walk around downtown. The streets included in the outdoor refreshmen­t area program cover most of the Dickson Street entertainm­ent district and the square.

The boundary roughly covers Lafayette Street to the north, East Avenue, Mountain Street to the south and West Avenue. One trail to the south stretches along School Avenue from Mountain Street to Prairie Street. Another trail to the west reaches Powerhouse Avenue.

The program will be in effect 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. every day. Businesses have the option to participat­e. They will sell drinks inside, in disposable, green-striped cups the city will provide, to customers who can then take the drinks out the door. Cups can’t be brought into businesses or given to other people. The cups are environmen­tally friendly, and extra recycling receptacle­s will be set up around downtown. Customers also have to wear branded wristbands, provided to businesses by the city. Servers will ask for identifica­tion with every order, even if the customer is wearing a wristband.

Signs will be placed on the designated streets to let participan­ts know where the boundary lies.

The city will host multiple orientatio­n sessions for businesses to go over the rules and answer any questions. Staff anticipate­s 20-30 businesses will participat­e.

Business owners asked the program take place seven days a week to avoid confusion, Economic Vitality Director Devin Howland said. Many asked it begin before students at the University of

Arkansas return to campus, he said. The days and times of the programs could change.

Several bars have been closed with no revenue for up to four months because of the pandemic, Howland said. Unemployme­nt benefits for many employees are coming to an end, and the state reinstated the search for work requiremen­t, meaning businesses need to open, he said.

“Expansion to seven days a week helps them remove the choice between economic gain and safety of staff by enabling establishm­ents to operate solely on a to-go basis,” Howland said.

The boundary, spanning most of downtown, is designed to “de-intensify” the district, Howland said. Broadening the outdoor refreshmen­t area, rather than designatin­g only Dickson Street or the downtown square, will deconcentr­ate people, he said.

“We need folks to spread out,” Howland said. “And it’s much more characteri­stic of what we had hoped to achieve with this district — it’s not about a party.”

In a separate move Tuesday, the City Council waived a number of the fees and review processes associated with setting up a sidewalk cafe or parklet outside a business.

The city has had a sidewalk cafe ordinance for a number of years. However, many of the sidewalks downtown are narrow, which has hindered businesses from applying to have one, Developmen­t Services Director Garner Stoll said.

Businesses with paid parking spaces in front of their doors will be able to use up to three of the spaces to install a parklet. Parklets usually look like picnic tables outside with plants and other objects or fencing to separate people from cars on the street.

There has to be some type of buffer, per the ordinance, which will be reviewed by city staff with an applicatio­n. Parklets or sidewalk cafes also must be compliant with the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act. Nothing permanent can be installed.

Businesses must pay the daily rate per parking space taken up by a parklet or sidewalk cafe. In the Dickson Street entertainm­ent district, it’s $5 per day per space. In and around the square, it’s $2.50 per space per day, Parking Manager Justin Clay said.

In other business, the city so far has spent $73,000 to buy 242,000 masks. About 110,000 masks have been distribute­d to businesses to give to residents for free, Chief Financial Officer Paul Becker said.

 ?? (File photo/NWA Democrat-Gazette/Andy Shupe) ?? Residents walk May 29 along Dickson Street in Fayettevil­le. The city will begin allowing people to drink outside with branded cups and wristbands next week.
(File photo/NWA Democrat-Gazette/Andy Shupe) Residents walk May 29 along Dickson Street in Fayettevil­le. The city will begin allowing people to drink outside with branded cups and wristbands next week.

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