Bill Text: FL S0924 | 2022 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Seating Requirements for Special Food Service Establishment Licenses
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Failed) 2022-03-14 - Died in Regulated Industries [S0924 Detail]
Download: Florida-2022-S0924-Introduced.html
Florida Senate - 2022 SB 924 By Senator Bradley 5-00995A-22 2022924__ 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to seating requirements for special 3 food service establishment licenses; amending s. 4 561.20, F.S.; revising the requirements for receiving 5 a special food service establishment license; 6 providing an effective date. 7 8 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 9 10 Section 1. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section 11 561.20, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 12 561.20 Limitation upon number of licenses issued.— 13 (2)(a) The limitation of the number of licenses as provided 14 in this section does not prohibit the issuance of a special 15 license to: 16 1. Any bona fide hotel, motel, or motor court of not fewer 17 than 80 guest rooms in any county having a population of less 18 than 50,000 residents, and of not fewer than 100 guest rooms in 19 any county having a population of 50,000 residents or greater; 20 or any bona fide hotel or motel located in a historic structure,21 as defined in s. 561.01(20),with fewer than 100 guest rooms 22 which derives at least 51 percent of its gross revenue from the 23 rental of hotel or motel rooms, which is licensed as a public 24 lodging establishment by the Division of Hotels and Restaurants; 25 provided, however, that a bona fide hotel or motel with no fewer 26 than 10 and no more than 25 guest rooms which is a historic 27 structure,as defined in s. 561.01(20),in a municipality that 28 on the effective date of this act has a population, according to 29 the University of Florida’s Bureau of Economic and Business 30 Research Estimates of Population for 1998, of no fewer than 31 25,000 and no more than 35,000 residents and that is within a 32 constitutionally chartered county may be issued a special 33 license. This special license shall allow the sale and 34 consumption of alcoholic beverages only on the licensed premises 35 of the hotel or motel. In addition, the hotel or motel must 36 derive at least 60 percent of its gross revenue from the rental 37 of hotel or motel rooms and the sale of food and nonalcoholic 38 beverages; provided that this subparagraph shall supersede local 39 laws requiring a greater number of hotel rooms; 40 2. Any condominium accommodation of which no fewer than 100 41 condominium units are wholly rentable to transients and which is 42 licensed under chapter 509, except that the license shall be 43 issued only to the person or corporation that operates the hotel 44 or motel operation and not to the association of condominium 45 owners; 46 3. Any condominium accommodation of which no fewer than 50 47 condominium units are wholly rentable to transients, which is 48 licensed under chapter 509, and which is located in any county 49 having home rule under s. 10 or s. 11, Art. VIII of the State 50 Constitution of 1885, as amended, and incorporated by reference 51 in s. 6(e), Art. VIII of the State Constitution, except that the 52 license shall be issued only to the person or corporation that 53 operates the hotel or motel operation and not to the association 54 of condominium owners; 55 4. A food service establishment that has 2,500 square feet 56 of service area, is equipped to serve meals to 100150persons 57 at one time, and derives at least 51 percent of its gross food 58 and beverage revenue from the sale of food and nonalcoholic 59 beverages during the first 120-day operating period and the 60 first 12-month operating period thereafter. Subsequent audit 61 timeframes must be based upon the audit percentage established 62 by the most recent audit and conducted on a staggered scale as 63 follows: level 1, 51 percent to 60 percent, every year; level 2, 64 61 percent to 75 percent, every 2 years; level 3, 76 percent to 65 90 percent, every 3 years; and level 4, 91 percent to 100 66 percent, every 4 years. A licensee under this subparagraph may 67 sell or deliver alcoholic beverages in a sealed container for 68 off-premises consumption if the sale or delivery is accompanied 69 by the sale of food within the same order. Such authorized sale 70 or delivery includes wine-based and liquor-based beverages 71 prepared by the licensee or its employee and packaged in a 72 container sealed by the licensee or its employee. This 73 subparagraph may not be construed to authorize public food 74 service establishments licensed under this subparagraph to sell 75 a bottle of distilled spirits sealed by a manufacturer. Any sale 76 or delivery of malt beverages must comply with the container 77 size, labeling, and filling requirements imposed under s. 78 563.06. Any delivery of an alcoholic beverage under this 79 subparagraph must comply with s. 561.57. An alcoholic beverage 80 drink prepared by the vendor and sold or delivered for 81 consumption off the premises must be placed in a container 82 securely sealed by the licensee or its employees with an 83 unbroken seal that prevents the beverage from being immediately 84 consumed before removal from the premises. Such alcoholic 85 beverage also must be placed in a bag or other container that is 86 secured in such a manner that it is visibly apparent if the 87 container has been subsequently opened or tampered with, and a 88 dated receipt for the alcoholic beverage and food must be 89 provided by the licensee and attached to the bag or container. 90 If transported in a motor vehicle, an alcoholic beverage that is 91 not in a container sealed by the manufacturer must be placed in 92 a locked compartment, a locked trunk, or the area behind the 93 last upright seat of a motor vehicle. It is a violation of the 94 prohibition in s. 562.11 to allow any person under the age of 21 95 to deliver alcoholic beverages on behalf of a vendor. The vendor 96 or the agent or employee of the vendor must verify the age of 97 the person making the delivery of the alcoholic beverage before 98 allowing any person to take possession of an alcoholic beverage 99 for the purpose of making a delivery on behalf of a vendor under 100 this section. A food service establishment granted a special 101 license on or after January 1, 1958, pursuant to general or 102 special law may not operate as a package store and may not sell 103 intoxicating beverages under such license after the hours of 104 serving or consumption of food have elapsed. Failure by a 105 licensee to meet the required percentage of food and 106 nonalcoholic beverage gross revenues during the covered 107 operating period shall result in revocation of the license or 108 denial of the pending license application. A licensee whose 109 license is revoked or an applicant whose pending application is 110 denied, or any person required to qualify on the special license 111 application, is ineligible to have any interest in a subsequent 112 application for such a license for a period of 120 days after 113 the date of the final denial or revocation; 114 5. Any caterer, deriving at least 51 percent of its gross 115 food and beverage revenue from the sale of food and nonalcoholic 116 beverages at each catered event, licensed by the Division of 117 Hotels and Restaurants under chapter 509. This subparagraph does 118 not apply to a culinary education program, as defined in s. 119 381.0072(2), which is licensed as a public food service 120 establishment by the Division of Hotels and Restaurants and 121 provides catering services. Notwithstanding any law to the 122 contrary, a licensee under this subparagraph shall sell or serve 123 alcoholic beverages only for consumption on the premises of a 124 catered event at which the licensee is also providing prepared 125 food, and shall prominently display its license at any catered 126 event at which the caterer is selling or serving alcoholic 127 beverages. A licensee under this subparagraph shall purchase all 128 alcoholic beverages it sells or serves at a catered event from a 129 vendor licensed under s. 563.02(1), s. 564.02(1), or licensed 130 under s. 565.02(1) subject to the limitation imposed in 131 subsection (1), as appropriate. A licensee under this 132 subparagraph may not store any alcoholic beverages to be sold or 133 served at a catered event. Any alcoholic beverages purchased by 134 a licensee under this subparagraph for a catered event that are 135 not used at that event must remain with the customer; provided 136 that if the vendor accepts unopened alcoholic beverages, the 137 licensee may return such alcoholic beverages to the vendor for a 138 credit or reimbursement. Regardless of the county or counties in 139 which the licensee operates, a licensee under this subparagraph 140 shall pay the annual state license tax set forth in s. 141 565.02(1)(b). A licensee under this subparagraph must maintain 142 for a period of 3 years all records and receipts for each 143 catered event, including all contracts, customers’ names, event 144 locations, event dates, food purchases and sales, alcoholic 145 beverage purchases and sales, nonalcoholic beverage purchases 146 and sales, and any other records required by the department by 147 rule to demonstrate compliance with the requirements of this 148 subparagraph. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, any 149 vendor licensed under s. 565.02(1) subject to the limitation 150 imposed in subsection (1), may, without any additional licensure 151 under this subparagraph, serve or sell alcoholic beverages for 152 consumption on the premises of a catered event at which prepared 153 food is provided by a caterer licensed under chapter 509. If a 154 licensee under this subparagraph also possesses any other 155 license under the Beverage Law, the license issued under this 156 subparagraph may not authorize the holder to conduct activities 157 on the premises to which the other license or licenses apply 158 that would otherwise be prohibited by the terms of that license 159 or the Beverage Law. This section does not permit the licensee 160 to conduct activities that are otherwise prohibited by the 161 Beverage Law or local law. The Division of Alcoholic Beverages 162 and Tobacco is hereby authorized to adopt rules to administer 163 the license created in this subparagraph, to include rules 164 governing licensure, recordkeeping, and enforcement. The first 165 $300,000 in fees collected by the division each fiscal year 166 pursuant to this subparagraph shall be deposited in the 167 Department of Children and Families’ Operations and Maintenance 168 Trust Fund to be used only for alcohol and drug abuse education, 169 treatment, and prevention programs. The remainder of the fees 170 collected shall be deposited into the Hotel and Restaurant Trust 171 Fund created pursuant to s. 509.072; or 172 6. A culinary education program as defined in s. 173 381.0072(2) which is licensed as a public food service 174 establishment by the Division of Hotels and Restaurants. 175 a. This special license shall allow the sale and 176 consumption of alcoholic beverages on the licensed premises of 177 the culinary education program. The culinary education program 178 shall specify designated areas in the facility where the 179 alcoholic beverages may be consumed at the time of application. 180 Alcoholic beverages sold for consumption on the premises may be 181 consumed only in areas designated under s. 561.01(11) and may 182 not be removed from the designated area. Such license shall be 183 applicable only in and for designated areas used by the culinary 184 education program. 185 b. If the culinary education program provides catering 186 services, this special license shall also allow the sale and 187 consumption of alcoholic beverages on the premises of a catered 188 event at which the licensee is also providing prepared food. A 189 culinary education program that provides catering services is 190 not required to derive at least 51 percent of its gross revenue 191 from the sale of food and nonalcoholic beverages. 192 Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, a licensee that 193 provides catering services under this sub-subparagraph shall 194 prominently display its beverage license at any catered event at 195 which the caterer is selling or serving alcoholic beverages. 196 Regardless of the county or counties in which the licensee 197 operates, a licensee under this sub-subparagraph shall pay the 198 annual state license tax set forth in s. 565.02(1)(b). A 199 licensee under this sub-subparagraph must maintain for a period 200 of 3 years all records required by the department by rule to 201 demonstrate compliance with the requirements of this sub 202 subparagraph. 203 c. If a licensee under this subparagraph also possesses any 204 other license under the Beverage Law, the license issued under 205 this subparagraph does not authorize the holder to conduct 206 activities on the premises to which the other license or 207 licenses apply that would otherwise be prohibited by the terms 208 of that license or the Beverage Law. This subparagraph does not 209 permit the licensee to conduct activities that are otherwise 210 prohibited by the Beverage Law or local law. Any culinary 211 education program that holds a license to sell alcoholic 212 beverages shall comply with the age requirements set forth in 213 ss. 562.11(4), 562.111(2), and 562.13. 214 d. The Division of Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco may 215 adopt rules to administer the license created in this 216 subparagraph, to include rules governing licensure, 217 recordkeeping, and enforcement. 218 e. A license issued pursuant to this subparagraph does not 219 permit the licensee to sell alcoholic beverages by the package 220 for off-premises consumption. 221 222 However, any license heretofore issued to any such hotel, motel, 223 motor court, or restaurant or hereafter issued to any such 224 hotel, motel, or motor court, including a condominium 225 accommodation, under the general law may not be moved to a new 226 location, such license being valid only on the premises of such 227 hotel, motel, motor court, or restaurant. Licenses issued to 228 hotels, motels, motor courts, or restaurants under the general 229 law and held by such hotels, motels, motor courts, or 230 restaurants on May 24, 1947, shall be counted in the quota 231 limitation contained in subsection (1). Any license issued for 232 any hotel, motel, or motor court under this law shall be issued 233 only to the owner of the hotel, motel, or motor court or, in the 234 event the hotel, motel, or motor court is leased, to the lessee 235 of the hotel, motel, or motor court; and the license shall 236 remain in the name of the owner or lessee so long as the license 237 is in existence. Any special license now in existence heretofore 238 issued under this law cannot be renewed except in the name of 239 the owner of the hotel, motel, motor court, or restaurant or, in 240 the event the hotel, motel, motor court, or restaurant is 241 leased, in the name of the lessee of the hotel, motel, motor 242 court, or restaurant in which the license is located and must 243 remain in the name of the owner or lessee so long as the license 244 is in existence. Any license issued under this section shall be 245 marked “Special,” and nothing herein provided shall limit, 246 restrict, or prevent the issuance of a special license for any 247 restaurant or motel which shall hereafter meet the requirements 248 of the law existing immediately before the effective date of 249 this act, if construction of such restaurant has commenced 250 before the effective date of this act and is completed within 30 251 days thereafter, or if an application is on file for such 252 special license at the time this act takes effect; and any such 253 licenses issued under this proviso may be annually renewed as 254 now provided by law. Nothing herein prevents an application for 255 transfer of a license to a bona fide purchaser of any hotel, 256 motel, motor court, or restaurant by the purchaser of such 257 facility or the transfer of such license pursuant to law. 258 Section 2. This act shall take effect upon becoming a law.