Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Alcohol board’s 22 rules criticized

Legislator chides implementa­tion

- CLAUDIA LAUER

Legislator­s were miffed Wednesday to learn that a set of 22 rule changes dealing with alcohol sales and distributi­on before the Arkansas Legislativ­e Council had already gone into effect.

The rules tighten regulation­s on avoiding the sale of alcohol to minors or overservin­g patrons as well as relieving some of the red tape that restaurant­s and other establishm­ents go through to get alcohol permits.

But legislator­s noted during a meeting of the council’s Administra­tive Rules and Regulation­s Committee on Wednesday that the Alcoholic Beverage Control agency of the Department of Finance and Administra­tion had jumped the gun on putting the rules in place.

“If it’s a statutory matter, then it’s in the law. But if it asks you to implement a rule, then those rules shouldn’t go into effect until this council has had a chance to review them,” said Rep. Kelley Linck, R-Yellville, chairman of the committee. “I don’t know if you’re creating issues, but you’re certainly sidesteppi­ng the process.”

Michael Langley, the director of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Administra­tion Division, said the agency came before the House and Senate State Agencies and Government­al Affairs committees in February for a review of the rules and mistook that meeting for the last step before the rules could be implemente­d. During that meeting, the committees reviewed 22 of 27 rules and held the other five for further clarificat­ion.

“When I met with them, I asked if I needed to come back here. And apparently it was our misunderst­anding,” Langley told the board.

He said the laws governing the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board’s rule-making ability make the role of the Legislatur­e unclear.

“The statute says that once the ABC Board passes it, that’s when the rules are filed, it doesn’t include this process as part of this,” Langley said. “We thought we were done.”

Langley said he had met with at least one representa­tive who had raised concerns about one of the five delayed rules and reached a consensus that allowed it to be implemente­d. He said he wasn’t sure which of the other held rule proposals were put in place.

Linck, who raised the most concerns about the rules process, noted that it was a good example of why the Legislatur­e proposed a constituti­onal amendment that passed as Issue 1 on the November ballot to increase lawmakers’ role in rule-making.

The measure allows the Legislatur­e to create laws this session to give legislativ­e committees veto authority over proposed state agency administra­tive rules.

The council currently reviews state agency rules, but the Arkansas Supreme Court has said legislator­s cannot block new rules. Voting to approve or disapprove state agency rules would violate the state constituti­on’s requiremen­t for separation of powers among the legislativ­e, executive and judicial branches of government, the courts have ruled previously.

State Sen. Jonathan Dismang, R-Searcy, who proposed Issue 1, has previously said the amendment will give more control to lawmakers to ensure that rules and regulation­s adopted by state agencies follow the intent of laws approved by the Legislatur­e. Dismang filed Senate Bill 2 on Monday, a shell bill that will outline the new process for legislativ­e committees to veto or approve proposed agency rules.

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