Daily Press

Food-liquor ratio bill dies in Virginia House

- By Trevor Metcalfe Staff writer Trevor Metcalfe, 757-222-5345, trevor.metcalfe@ pilotonlin­e.com

A bill that would have eased the rules around how much food Virginia bars and restaurant­s serving liquor must sell died in the House of Delegates.

Senate Bill 168 was sent back to a committee March 5 after being read twice on the House floor. The move effectivel­y kills the legislatio­n for the 2023 session, since the deadline for committees to move legislatio­n forward was March 4. “It’s unfortunat­e that a pro-business, red-tape slashing bill died by process today rather than risking a vote and its potential passage,” bill sponsor and state Sen. Bryce Reeves, R-Spotsylvan­ia, said in an email.

Restaurant­s and bars with mixed beverage licenses must make 45% of their total sales from food and non-alcoholic beverages. Beer and wine sales are exempt.

The bill would have reduced the ratio to 35% for food and non-alcoholic drinks for businesses making at least $4,000 but less than $35,000 in monthly food sales. Businesses posting more than $35,000 in food sales would not have to meet any ratio requiremen­t.

The first version of the bill had smaller sales figures, requiring businesses to post just $10,000 in monthly food sales to be exempt from the ratio.

Several Hampton Roads restaurant operators voiced support for the bill. But the measure faced opposition from a Richmond-based lobbying group called the Virginia Restaurant Associatio­n, made up of owners of restaurant­s such as The Tobacco Company Restaurant in Richmond and Northern Virginia’s Great American Restaurant­s group.

Virginia Restaurant Associatio­n Director Michael Byrne said the group attempted to convince lawmakers that the legislatio­n would bring seismic, unneeded changes to the industry.

“It apparently paid off because they were listening,” Byrne said.

In previous comments, Byrne said the bill was unfair to restaurant­s who have spent significan­t sums to build out kitchens, stock food inventory and follow regulation­s.

 ?? STEPHEN M. KATZ/STAFF ?? Venture Kitchen and Bar bartender Tricia Waclawski serves food last month in Hampton. A bill to ease the rules for how much food restaurant­s and bars with mixed beverage licenses must sell died in the Virginia House of Delegates.
STEPHEN M. KATZ/STAFF Venture Kitchen and Bar bartender Tricia Waclawski serves food last month in Hampton. A bill to ease the rules for how much food restaurant­s and bars with mixed beverage licenses must sell died in the Virginia House of Delegates.
 ?? ?? Reeves
Reeves

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