Kansas Gov. Mark Parkinson ordered the state’s alcohol regulation agency to delay enforcing a decades old — but largely ignored — law that requires bars to price drinks according to alcohol content, the Associated Press reported July 16.
The law would effectively end all specials that make drinks cheaper by volume — mandating that a 32-ounce beer cost twice as much as a 16-ounce beer, for example.
Businesses complained when the Department of Revenue’s Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) division warned that it would begin enforcing the law Aug. 1.
A spokesperson for the governor’s office said the regulatory delay will allow the ABC to address businesses’ concerns and give the state attorney general’s office time to reexamine the statute.
Published
July 2010