South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Voters say ‘yes’ to early closing time for bars

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MIAMI BEACH — Last call could come three hours earlier in Miami Beach, where a majority of voters fed up with nighttime violence chose “Yes” to rolling back the 5 a.m. closing time for alcohol sales.

The voter referendum was held Tuesday in response to increasing­ly raucous crowds and public drinking in the South Beach entertainm­ent district, where tension has been bubbling for years as party crowds grew from a few weekends into a yearround presence. It worsened during the pandemic when city officials closed the main drag to vehicles and allowed restaurant­s to offer more outdoor seating along Ocean Drive.

The city imposed an 8 p.m. curfew during spring break, when more than 1,000 people were arrested. But it wasn’t entirely clear how much support such measures had among citizens in a city that depends on tourism.

Mayor Dan Gelber, who pushed for a 2 a.m. closing time, also won reelection on Tuesday. He declared victory for both campaigns.

“This is what our residents want,” Gelber said. He called the earlier limit to alcohol sales a first step toward reposition­ing South Beach’s entertainm­ent district as a “live, work, play” area with new housing, offices and cultural spaces.

The city’s commission­ers had agreed to a temporary restrictio­n of early-morning alcohol sales in South Beach last summer. Now city staff must develop legislatio­n to codify the referendum. Gelber said he expects commission­ers to support such measures now that voters have spoken.

In 2017, voters rejected a similar proposal for a 2 a.m. alcohol sales ban on South Beach’s Ocean Drive, the Miami Herald reported.

Exemptions are possible — Gelber said he would be open to letting bigger hotels with security staffs continue serving alcohol until 5 a.m.

Critics said the earlier cutoff would cost the city millions without stopping crime. South Beach club owners poured $675,000 into a failed campaign to kill the referendum, the newspaper reported.

“Today’s non-binding straw poll was an attempt at misdirecti­on by leaders who have failed to stem the growing problems of crime on Miami Beach,” said a statement from Citizens for a Safe Miami Beach, which plans to “oppose solutions that do nothing to solve crime, but will cost 4,100 local workers their jobs, increase property taxes, and cut tens of millions of dollars from city revenues.”

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/AP ?? The Clevelande­r Hotel and Bar is shown at dusk along Ocean Drive, Sept. 24 in Miami Beach. Last call could come three hours earlier in Miami Beach, where voters fed up with nighttime violence chose yes to rolling back the 5 a.m. closing time for alcohol sales.
LYNNE SLADKY/AP The Clevelande­r Hotel and Bar is shown at dusk along Ocean Drive, Sept. 24 in Miami Beach. Last call could come three hours earlier in Miami Beach, where voters fed up with nighttime violence chose yes to rolling back the 5 a.m. closing time for alcohol sales.

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