Ask Dan Sweeney where to wrap up a night on the town in Anoka and he'll open the door to Danno's, the bar he owns with the red awning in the city's historic downtown.
"More than anyone, our bar is the end-of-the-night bar," said Sweeney. "I put lights on top of the building. We make it eye-catching to be here."
Last call now will come an hour earlier at Danno's, along with other local hot spots that have had the city's permission to sell liquor until 2 a.m.
Starting Jan. 1, the city will stop issuing late-closing permits. That means the five Anoka bars that pour drinks during that extra hour — four of them downtown — will do so for the last time on New Year's Eve.
The liquor sales change coincides with broader efforts in Anoka to take a closer look at the downtown entertainment district, with officials dreaming up ways to bolster visitor numbers: more live music in the summer, food trucks and sidewalk seating.
"We want to create and continue to create an atmosphere that brings people into downtown," said Council Member Brian Wesp. "We're coming into situations that are unpleasant for the downtown and for the image of Anoka."
Police and city officials say a recent string of brawls around closing time partly fueled their decision to nix the 2 a.m. license. Much of the trouble has cropped up near the on-street parking ramp downtown, and rowdy behavior in the area often flares from 1 to 3:30 a.m., according to police.
In June, police confiscated a gun after a fight broke out on E. Main Street. In early August, authorities said several men in biker jackets beat up a man near Courtside Bar and Grill on Jackson Street.