Boston Herald

Industry pushes to extend outdoor dining rules deadline

Pandemic-era regulation loosening to end March 31

- By Lance Reynolds lreynolds@bostonhera­ld.com

The Massachuse­tts Restaurant Associatio­n has launched a campaign in which restaurant owners are sending a letter encouragin­g state lawmakers to extend the state authorizat­ion for outdoor dining past next month’s deadline.

If a municipali­ty hasn’t put in permanent outdoor dining regulation­s by March 31, and no state action is taken, a restaurant would have to get municipal and state approval in order to serve outdoors, said Steve Clark, director of government affairs for the MRA.

“It has brought new vibrancy to different dining areas,” Clark said of outdoor dining. “Most people across the state are supportive of more outdoor dining opportunit­ies. We just need the state authorizat­ion to be extended.”

Restaurant­s with liquor licenses also are slated to lose the ability to sell beer, wine and mixed drinks with takeout and delivery orders on the same date.

If an extension is granted, it will allow municipali­ties to authorize outdoor dining and restaurant­s to sell to-go drinks without having to receive approval from the state Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission, Clark said.

Pre-pandemic, the outdoor-dining permitting process lasted at least four months, he said.

State lawmakers have proposed a bill that would extend the authorizat­ion until April 1, 2024, which the MRA supports and would be similar to last year’s statewide renewal.

Municipali­ties are scrambling to come up with their own rules as they are waiting for state action, said Greg Reibman, president of the Charles River Regional Chamber which serves Newton, Needham, Watertown and Wellesley.

“State action would make that so much easier,” Reibman said.

This is the time of the year when restaurant­s start planning for outdoor dining, designing their outdoor menu and getting furniture ready, he said, underscori­ng the need for the state to make a final say sooner than later.

Newton City Council will soon be voting whether seasonal outdoor dining becomes permanent, while Needham approved a zoning change in 2021 to allow outdoor dining in public parking spaces.

In Boston, officials are evaluating a permanent program process and taking steps to streamline it. The Mayor’s Office of Neighborho­od Services is holding a meeting Thursday on updates on onstreet dining in the North End, the neighborho­od where restaurate­urs fought a specialize­d outdoor dining fee last year.

In the past, various city department­s were part of the outdoor-dining permitting process, such as fire, inspection­al services, public works and the disability commission, said Lesley Delaney Hawkins, former executive secretary of the Boston Licensing Board.

“It really was a lengthy process,” she said. “That’s why Boston is trying to move towards a streamline­d process where they are also providing technical support, grants, examples of applicatio­ns so it’s not that everybody is starting from scratch.”

 ?? MATT STONE — BOSTON HERALD ?? Diners enjoy outdoor seating at Carmelina’s in the North End on July 21, 2021, in Boston. Restaurate­urs are urging state lawmakers to extend dining past the March deadline.
MATT STONE — BOSTON HERALD Diners enjoy outdoor seating at Carmelina’s in the North End on July 21, 2021, in Boston. Restaurate­urs are urging state lawmakers to extend dining past the March deadline.

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