The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

County to rewrite its alcohol laws

- By Leon Stafford lstafford@ajc.com

Henry County’s last overhaul of its alcoholic beverage licensing laws occurred in the 1980s, when the south metro community was still mostly rural and brewpubs and distilleri­es weren’t part of Georgia’s economic landscape.

A lot has changed in the intervenin­g decades. Henry is now the second-fastest-growing county in Georgia. And craft breweries, wineries and other liquor operations have boomed across the metro area as the beverage industry has found new, popular ways to distribute its goods.

But that activity hasn’t come to Henry, and county leaders want to change that trajectory as part of a broader effort to compete economical­ly with surroundin­g communitie­s in the metro area. To that end, the county is embarking on a major revision of its local alcohol ordinances in 2019.

“The alcoholic beverage industry, like so many other industries, is changing and changing dramatical­ly, and our ordinance today does not deal with a lot of things that are becoming more routine and commonplac­e,” county attorney Patrick Jaugstette­r said during a Henry Commission meeting Tuesday.

The dynamic alcohol indus- try and consumer demands have led state and metro coun- ties to adjust ordinances to regulate everything from the legal way to take home unfinished bottles of wine from restau- rants to purchasing growlers — a jug used to transport beer purchased at a pub from one place to another.

Last year, the Georgia legislatur­e gave counties the go ahead to hold voter referendum­s on whether to allow alco- hol to be served in restaurant­s before 12:30 p.m. Sundays.

Voters in November OK’d so-called “brunch bill” referendum­s in cities and counties across the metro area — includ- ing Cobb, DeKalb, Gwinnett, Atlanta, Fayettevil­le, Douglas- ville and Johns Creek.

Jaugstette­r on Tuesday discussed the possibilit­y of bringing a similar “brunch bill” ref- erendum before Henry voters, but no timeline was set.

To kick off updates to its ordinance, the Henry Commission on Tuesday approved lowering the age of wait staff allowed to serve drinks from 21 to 18, as is now common practice in metro Atlanta and much of America, said Commission­er Dee Clemmons.

“All of our municipali­ties have this in place,” she said of the lower age limits in Stockbridg­e, McDono u gh and Hampton. “As a county, we should be leading instead of following the municipali­ties.”

Patrick McHugh, who oper- ates 15th Street Pizza & Pub in unincorpor­ated Henry, said changing the age limit levels the playing field. He’s had to pass on hiring many college students because they were younger than 21, when just a few miles away inside Stockbridg­e, a competitor could scoop them up.

Other areas that Jaugstette­r hopes to address include laws to regulate farm wineries, of which the county currently has none. He also wants address local ordinances to govern wholesaler­s of alcoholic beverages as well as curbside delivery of liquor at grocery stores.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Henry County plans to update its 1980s-era alcoholic beverage ordinances to make sure it has laws for distilleri­es, wineries or breweries, such as Atlanta’s SweetWater Brewing Co.
CONTRIBUTE­D Henry County plans to update its 1980s-era alcoholic beverage ordinances to make sure it has laws for distilleri­es, wineries or breweries, such as Atlanta’s SweetWater Brewing Co.

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