Alcohol to-go from restaurants gets closer to becoming permanent as Texas House gives initial approval
The Barn Door restaurant during dinner service in San Antonio on May 18, 2020. Credit: Christopher Lee for The Texas TribuneThe Texas House on Wednesday gave initial approval to legislation that would allow restaurants to sell alcohol to go beyond the coronavirus pandemic. AdHB 1024 was filed by Republican state Rep. Charlie Geren, a restaurant owner in Fort Worth, and co-authored by Democrats. His wife, Texas lobbyist Mindy Ellmer, has been paid for lobbying work by the Texas Restaurant Association, which is backing the legislation. According to the Texas Restaurant Association, 700,000 restaurant employees in Texas lost their jobs in the early days of the pandemic, and thousands of Texas restaurants have closed. Disclosure: Texas Restaurant Association has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors.
A Texas lawmaker worked with the state restaurant association to draft an alcohol-to-go bill. His wife lobbies for the group.
Texas lawmakers are pushing to permanently allow restaurants to sell alcohol for pickup and delivery orders, which Gov. The Texas Restaurant Association, which is backing the legislation, paid Ellmer between $25,000 and $49,000 for lobbying work from September through December, according to the Texas Ethics Commission. โThe real issue is that Texasโ ethics law is weak,โ Shelley said. According to the TRA, 700,000 restaurant employees in Texas lost their jobs in the early days the pandemic, and more than 10,000 Texas restaurants have already closed. With business hampered due to continued increases in infections, 30% of Texas restaurant operators still in business said in December they were concerned about the fate of their operations.
Masks required, COVID-19 tests encouraged for opening day in the Texas House next month
If a House member tests positive for the virus, he wrote, "arrangements will be made ... to allow them to take the oath of office." "The duration of the ceremony will be shortened," he wrote, "and there will be a significant reduction in the number of people admitted to the House floor and gallery." Access to the House floor will be restricted to lawmakers, essential staff, ceremony participants, temporary officers and approved guests, according to Geren. Each lawmaker or incoming member will have two guest seats for family or friends either on the chamber floor or in the gallery. That spacing, coupled with the requirement of a face mask, "is acceptable to medical professionals consulted by the House," he wrote.
The Texas Legislature meets in less than 100 days. Nobody knows how the session will look.
Itโs unclear what typical functions at the Texas Capitol will look like in January, or whether they will even exist. Senate and House members spearheading logistical discussions say that while much remains up in the air, the two chambers are working together to implement session rules that are consistent for both chambers. Plexiglass dividers have been installed in several House committee hearing rooms, Geren said. Masks will be required to enter Rosenthalโs Capitol office, which will not allow more than six people inside at a time. In addition to addressing the billions of dollars in shortfalls to the state budget and other core issues during session, state lawmakers are also set to undergo the once-in-a-decade process of redrawing the stateโs political maps.
Analysis: A government of, by and for but without the people
The Texas Capitol Building, Feb. 10, 2015. Credit: Todd Wiseman / The Texas TribuneEditor's note: If you'd like an email notice whenever we publish Ross Ramsey's column, click here. The Texas Capitol has a capacity of 6,000 if you throw the doors open, according to state Rep. Charlie Geren, R-Fort Worth. The disinfecting was complicated by the artwork and antiques in the building, which would have been ruined by fogging machines. Geren says the public, the lobby and the media might all be forced out, left to follow the action online. The Senate might have its galleries open, but while were in this pandemic, there will be rules for social distancing.