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Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Liquor License Liberalization Lessens Local Limitations
Monday, July 13, 2009
Will new liquor laws move Utah’s reputation into the twenty-first century?

New liquor laws took affect in
The new laws do not eliminate private clubs, but there is no longer a requirement to be a club in order to serve drinks without being a restaurant. As a result, most clubs are going public. (The Salt Lake City Weekly claims to have a list online where you can check the status of your favorite watering hole, but I was unable to find it in five minutes of searching their site. Pick up a hard copy of the entertaining July 2 “Liquor and
One strange inconsistency in the law concerns the oft derided “Zion Curtain” that shielded restaurant patrons from the sight of a bartender mixing drinks. The state seemed confused as to whether the reason for the curtain is to shield all patrons from witnessing a degenerate act or to shield children from a vision so enticing (seeing a drink shaken) that should they see it, it would seduce them irrevocably to the rites of the cocktail. Under a new law that was effective May 12, 2009, restaurants that had a Zion Curtain may remove them, but restaurants that opened after that date must still have one. Perhaps the intent is to put all restaurants on an equal financial footing… Nevertheless, it appears that much progress has been made in modernizing