The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia House OKs ‘brunch bill’ for alcohol

Privately owned eateries would be able to sell it at 11 a.m. Sundays.

- By Maya T. Prabhu maya.prabhu@ajc.com

Sunday morning brunches of mimosas and bloody marys could be headed to Georgia restaurant­s after the House gave final approval Monday to a bill that could let the establishm­ents sell alcohol earlier.

House members voted 97-64 to approve Senate Bill 17, sending the legislatio­n to Gov. Nathan Deal for his signature.

The legislatio­n bumps the time to begin allowing alcohol sales on Sundays at privately owned restaurant­s and wineries that serve food from 12:30 p.m. to 11 a.m. Local voters would have to approve the time change before it could take effect.

State Sen. Renee Unterman, R-Buford, who sponsored the bill, said the legislatio­n was needed because some state-owned establishm­ents, including the Georgia World Congress Center, are allowed to sell alcohol earlier than 12:30 p.m. on Sundays.

Previous iterations of the bill this year would have allowed alcohol sales to begin as early as 10 a.m. and permit customers to buy the beverages at stores. The retail sales provision was stricken from the bill by the Senate.

“We’re delighted after two years that the ‘mimosa mandate’ passed the General Assembly,” Unterman said. “It was a compromise and it’s not quite what we wanted, but it’s better than what we had.”

Versions of the legislatio­n have made it through the House chamber in prior years, but they stalled once they reached the Senate.

Last month, senators voted in favor of the bill 38-18.

Speaking against the bill Monday, state Rep. Dominic LaRiccia, R-Douglas, said alcohol leads to many ills, including sexual assault, suicide and fatal car wrecks.

“On my way to church, every Sunday morning, I drive right past a (driving under the influence) defensive driving school,” he said. “Early on Sunday morning, the parking lot is full. I want you to let that sink in for a minute.”

Lawmakers also engaged in some biblical back and forth during the floor debate, with LaRiccia using the Bible to make a case against allowing local government­s to decide whether they want to change the time alcohol is sold.

“Adam and Eve had local control in the Garden of Eden and bit that fruit and it was the fall of humanity,” he said. “And we keep taking a bite out of that apple.”

State Rep. Erica Thomas, D-Austell, fired back.

“Is it not true that one of the first miracles was Jesus turning water into wine?” she said.

Gov. Sonny Perdue and the Senate killed several attempts during the late 2000s to pass bills allowing alcohol sales at stores on Sunday. Legislatio­n allowing such sales finally passed in 2011, during Deal’s first year in office.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Rep. Erica Thomas, D-Austell, asked, “Is it not true that one of the first miracles was Jesus turning water into wine?”
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM Rep. Erica Thomas, D-Austell, asked, “Is it not true that one of the first miracles was Jesus turning water into wine?”

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