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Alcoholic beverage control; food-to-beverage ratio. Reduces the current 45 percent food-to-beverage ratio for certain mixed beverage licensees. The bill requires a mixed beverage restaurant, caterer's, or limited caterer's licensee with monthly food sales of at least $4,000 to have a food-to-beverage ratio that meets or exceeds 30 percent. The bill also requires that restaurants have at least as many seats at tables as at counters and prohibits mixed beverage licensees from serving mixed beverages once food is no longer being sold for on-premises consumption. The bill sunsets on July 1, 2027, and requires the Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Control Authority to collect data regarding the compliance of mixed beverage licensees with the provisions of the bill and the impact of the change to the food-to-beverage ratio on the gross amount of food consumed on a licensee's premises. The bill requires the Authority to report such data to the Chairmen of the House Committee on General Laws and the Senate Committee on Rehabilitation and Social Services by November 1, 2026.
Introduced
Jan 7, 2025
Last Action
Feb 18, 2025
Session
VA 2025
Sponsors
1 primary · 0 co
Left in General Laws
Placed on Calendar
Referred to Committee on General Laws
Read first time
Rehabilitation and Social Services Substitute agreed to
Read second time
Reading of substitute waived
Engrossed by Senate - committee substitute-SB1163S1
Constitutional reading dispensed (on 3rd reading) (40-Y 0-N)
Rules suspended
Passed Senate (36-Y 4-N)
Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (SB1163)
Passed by for the day
Rules suspended
Constitutional reading dispensed (on 1st reading) (40-Y 0-N)
Committee substitute printed 25104842D-S1
Reported from Rehabilitation and Social Services with substitute (14-Y 1-N)
Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (SB1163)
Prefiled and ordered printed; Offered 01-08-2025 25102428D
Referred to Committee on Rehabilitation and Social Services
Get a plain-English explanation of what this bill does, who it affects, and why it matters.
Left in General Laws
Ryan T. McDougle