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PA Liquor Control Board: All sale of food and alcohol for on-site consumption is shut down until further notice due to coronavirus

Bars, restaurants, clubs, caterers, wineries and breweries may still sell food and alcohol for consumption off-site, the PLCB said.
Credit: WPMT

HARRISBURG, Pa. — First it was a suggestion.

Now it's a mandate.

On Wednesday, the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board announced that all retail licensees, clubs, permittees, and producers must cease the sale of food and alcohol for consumption inside their establishments, effective at 8 p.m. Wednesday. 

The mandate will be in place until further notice. It is in the interest of slowing the spread of coronavirus, the PLCB said, adding that it is acting with authorization from Governor Tom Wolf, who earlier had strongly suggested Pennsylvania bars and restaurants make such precautionary moves.

Any licensee that fails to comply with this mandate now risks citation by the Pennsylvania State Police Bureau of Liquor Control Enforcement and suspension of operating authority by the PLCB. 

Any licensee that continues to operate after its license is suspended risks further enforcement action and closure by the BLCE. 

Ultimately, the PLCB siad, citations may put the business’s liquor license at risk, both through the citation process and upon application for renewal to the PLCB.

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“Medical experts and public health professionals from around the world agree the best step we can take to slow the spread of COVID-19 is to stop gathering in public spaces,” said Board Chairman Tim Holden. “Extraordinary times require extraordinary measures, and this decision is not made lightly. But saving lives and protecting the health and safety of our communities is our highest priority right now.”

As of 8 p.m. Wednesday, the PLCB said:

  • Restaurant, retail dispenser and hotel licensees may not allow the service or consumption of food or alcohol on the licensed premises. Sales to go are still permitted, as are hotel sales of food and alcohol for consumption in a private room.
     
  • Licensees holding wine expanded permits authorizing the sale of wine to go may not allow the service or consumption of food or alcohol on the licensed premises. Sales to go are still permitted, as are the operation of a grocery store, convenience store or gas station next to the licensed premises.
     
  • Airport restaurant license holders may not allow the service or consumption of food or alcohol on the licensed premises. Sales to go are still permitted.
     
  • Clubs and catering clubs may not allow the service or consumption of food or alcohol on the licensed premises, and such licensees are not authorized to sell any alcohol to go. They may continue selling food to go.
     
  • Permittees including special occasion, off-premise catering, exposition and farmers markets may not allow the service or consumption of food or alcohol on the licensed premises or at public gatherings.
     
  • Breweries, distilleries/limited distilleries, and limited wineries may not allow the service or consumption of food or alcohol on the licensed premises. Sales of the producer’s own alcohol for off-premises consumption is permitted.
     
  • Sacramental wine licensees may not allow food or beverage consumption on premise but may sell sacramental wine for consumption off premise.

Additionally, the PLCB said, it has received a number of inquiries as to how beer distributors should react to business closure guidance. As suppliers to grocery stores, convenience stores, and other retail licensees permitted to sell beer to go, distributors’ continued operation will preserve beer accessibility for consumers. As such, the PLCB said it is not limiting distributors’ operations at this time, but beer distributors are strongly encouraged to employ social distancing best practices and avoid public gatherings of 10 or more people.

Complaints regarding licensees not complying with these mandates may be directed to the Bureau of Liquor Control Enforcement at 1-800-932-0602 or reported through the BLCE’s online complaint form.

The PLCB will constantly re-evaluate this policy, guided by the strategy developed by the Governor’s Office and the Pennsylvania Department of Health, and lift restrictions at the appropriate time.

Source: The Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board

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