Downtown Stillwater's Mad Capper Saloon & Eatery doesn't have a patio, so when Gov. Tim Walz on Wednesday authorized bars and restaurants to begin outdoor service on June 1, it wasn't the news that owner Tammy Chilson was hoping for.
But the Minnesota Department of Transportation might save her restaurant's summer.
The agency, in concert with the Department of Employment and Economic Development, is crafting a plan that would allow establishments suffering business losses during the coronavirus lockdown to temporarily set up chairs and tables on sidewalks, green spaces and in parking lanes along state-operated roads that run through small and medium-size towns.
The Federal Highway Administration has signed off on the idea, and MnDOT is working fast to draw up guidelines and a permit process that could be in place as soon as Wednesday, said MnDOT Commissioner Margaret Anderson Kelliher.
"We would like to do that," Chilson said. "That would be awesome. Maybe we could borrow furniture from our neighbors."
Stillwater Mayor Ted Kozlowski is on board, too. The City Council this week passed resolutions allowing residents to buy beer and wine from bars and take it to Lowell Park to sip.
The council also relaxed provisions on liquor licenses, allowing establishments to expand outdoor seating areas into public and private spaces such as sidewalks and parking lots.
That works fine for establishments on city streets, but the rules are different on the historic river city's Main Street because it is a state highway under MnDOT's control.