Measure limited to to-go cocktails
Both branches of the Legislature have now signed off on allowing Massachusetts restaurants to sell togo cocktails.
The Senate on Friday passed a bill that would allow restaurants to sell mixed drinks in sealed containers alongside takeout and delivery food orders, a measure some bar and restaurant owners have been advocating for as a way to attract customers during the COVID-19 crisis that has hurt the restaurant sector.
Unlike the broader restaurant relief bill the House passed unanimously five weeks ago — which also included a cap on third-party delivery fees and waived penalties and interest for late meals tax payments --the Senate’s bill speaks only to the issue of takeout cocktails.
The two branches would need to agree on an approach before they could send a bill to Baker, who said last month that he supported the House’s restaurant bill. The House was not in session on Friday and meets next on Monday.
Sen. Diana Dizoglio, who sponsored the Senate bill, said it would help restaurants generate revenue to stay afloat as they work “day and night to climb back to some state of normalcy” amid capacity limits and other public health restrictions.
“I know that the Legislature does not have say in the governor’s reopening plan, but we do have a duty to do every single thing that we can during this process to help those that are struggling in our communities, and our mom-and-pop restaurants have been asking us to help,” the Methuen Democrat said.
Baker limited restaurants to takeout and delivery service only under a March executive order, and they were allowed to resume outdoor dining during the second phase of the state’s reopening plan. Indoor dining was cleared to resume later in June, in the second component of Phase 2.
The sector still faces challenge though due to capacity limits, expenses associated with complying with the new public health landscape, and bringing back customers who are still concerned about virus transmission. Earlier on in the pandemic, when the restrictions on restaurant service were newer, the House and Senate passed a law signed by Baker on April 3 — allowing establishments holding liquor licenses to sell beer and wine with takeout or delivery food orders.
Dizoglio said she’s talked with restaurant owners in her district who still haven’t been able to seat customers despite the reopening plan, because they have small dining rooms that don’t facilitate social distancing and lack outdoor space.
Rather than taking up the restaurant relief bill the House passed on June 2, the Senate passed a redrafted version of to-go cocktail legislation that Dizoglio had originally filed in May.