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‘Numbers game’ means more liquor licenses for Utah restaurants

Posted at 3:49 PM, Mar 29, 2016
and last updated 2016-03-30 00:40:48-04

SALT LAKE CITY -- Month after month, people line up to ask Utah's Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control Commission for a liquor license.

At Tuesday's meeting, one man announced he'd been waiting a year-and-a-half for a highly-coveted full-service liquor license. Another business owner said he'd been in line for almost a year.

Some ask for a license to just serve beer or wine in a restaurant. Others want a full-service club license (allowing them to serve spirits without any food restrictions). They all insist such licenses are vital to their economic success.

Not everyone gets a license, but under new tweaks to Utah's liquor laws more licenses are now available. Utah, being a liquor control state, doles out licenses by population quota. For example, one club license per 7,850 residents.

Ahead of Tuesday's meeting, the governor's office revealed that Utah's population had cleared the three million mark. That means seven new club licenses by July 2016.

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"With the population growth, that also creates licenses in the state," said Nina McDermott, the DABC's director of licensing and compliance.

Because of a pent-up demand for limited-service restaurant licenses (wine and beer only), the Utah State Legislature this year moved licenses around to free some up. Lawmakers took rarely-used tavern and reception center licenses and re-allocated them to restaurants. McDermott said with more than 50 licenses available and only three takers for reception center licenses, lawmakers shifted 41 of those to restaurants to use as limited-service licenses. Tavern licenses also converted to restaurant licenses.

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As a result, where the DABC used to have no licenses to give to restaurants who wanted to serve wine and beer, on Tuesday there were five applicants and 43 licenses available.

McDermott said the overall number of liquor licenses remains under population quota, but they got moved around.

"They (lawmakers) decided to look at it and say, 'We want more restaurants in the state.' So they were able to play the numbers game to be able to create more restaurants," she said.