Richmonders could soon be drinking in the mall Richmond

Richmonders could soon be drinking in the mall Richmond

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Richmonders could soon be drinking in the mall

Illustration: Victoria Ellis/Axios The owners of Short Pump Town Center have an application pending for an open container permit to allow shoppers to cruise the mall with an alcoholic drink in hand. The intrigue: If approved, which is likely to , it would be the first commercial center in Richmond to allow it and the closest thing to an anywhere in the area. Why it matters: Virginia's once stringent liquor laws (restaurants couldn't serve "" until 1968) have passed the General Assembly in recent years, but official open container districts have remained elusive in the state. In 2021, a bill localities to create up to three open container or entertainment districts didn't make it out of . Catch up quick: went into effect in 2017 allowing commercial lifestyle center ABC licenses, like the one Short Pump is seeking, in which shoppers can buy a drink from a restaurant and wander through the mall drink in hand (in a plastic, branded cup).A allowing event organizers to set up open container districts in designated areas up to a dozen times a year for events like First Fridays or the 17th Street Farmers Market went into effect in 2019. Of note: These licenses are meant to encourage shoppers and event attendees to buy alcoholic beverages from restaurants as opposed to vendor beer or wine trucks, often . By the numbers: Since 2017, Virginia ABC has received 13 applications for the commercial districts — 10 of which came from Northern Virginia districts. Short Pump mall is the only Richmond-area center to apply, according to Virginia ABC. Of the 29 applications for special event licenses, has applied for and used one. Meanwhile: Other states and districts have passed laws allowing open container districts as a way to help restaurants recover from the pandemic, including Raleigh, which launched a . Get more local stories in your inbox with .Subscribe Support local journalism by becoming a member.

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Richmonders could soon be drinking in the mall Richmond | Trend Now