Minnesota bars and restaurants, looking for ways to survive this winter as the pandemic drags on, are pushing Gov. Tim Walz and state legislators for an OK to sell premade cocktails.
"The stock we are sitting on is liquor and the profitability for restaurants is in cocktails," said Jami Olson, owner of Mexican restaurant Centro in Minneapolis.
State leaders previously OK'd restaurants to sell beer and wine with takeout food orders, but Olson said that's done little to help her bottom line during the pandemic. Customers want to be able to order a margarita with their tacos or nachos, she said, estimating sales would be up 40% with the addition of cocktail sales.
As Walz works with lawmakers on a possible relief package for businesses hit by COVID-19 closures, he said earlier this week that he'd be open to a provision allowing to-go cocktails with carryout food orders.
"If that's something the Legislature can agree on, we should do that," Walz said.
But what sounds like a simple change faces a complicated push through the divided Minnesota Legislature, with its history of moving slowly to update the state's antiquated liquor laws. And the COVID relief package now being shaped behind the scenes is said to be more focused on direct grants and regulatory relief for bars, restaurants and other businesses forced to close as COVID-19 cases surge.
Starting Nov. 20, Walz ordered bars, restaurants, fitness center and entertainment venues to close for four weeks to slow the spread of the virus. It's the second time since March that bars and restaurants have had to close to in-person service, triggering a new wave of temporary or permanent restaurant closures.
Lawmakers agreed in April to allow bars and restaurants to offer to-go beer and wine during pandemic-triggered closures, but there are limitations. Restaurants can sell alcohol only with food orders in original, unopened packaging, and sales are capped at 72 ounces of beer, cider or hard seltzer and 750 milliliters of wine per order.