In Utah, Bad Booze Bills Never Die
In an attempt to create a new banquet license, a bill introduced in Utah would require every restaurant to build a wall that blocks off its private party space from the rest of the establishment.

It's been a little over five years since Utah tore it down, but the infamous "Zion Curtain" has risen from the dead. Like a zombie in a bad horror film, America's most ridiculed alcohol law is apparently unkillable.
The Zion Curtain has made headlines over the past several decades as one of the most glaring examples of our country's antiquated and nonsensical system of alcohol regulation. In its original iteration, the law required a physical wall to be in place that separated the area behind the bar where drinks were mixed from the restaurant's customers.
The intent behind the rule was supposedly to shield children from watching drinks being made. Seeing a mixologist at work, the theory went, could lure kids into glamorizing and romanticizing alcohol, which in turn might lead them to the bottle. Given these moralistic rationales, many cited the powerful lobbying presence of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Utah, which contributed to the law's nickname.
Regardless of the reasons for the law, the infeasibility and financial costs imposed by the Curtain became impossible to ignore: Restaurants reported missing out on hundreds of thousands of dollars annually in lost sales due to the fact that few customers wanted to sip on an old fashioned while staring at a wall 6 inches from their face.
Finally, in 2017, a partial reform passed the state Legislature. The Zion Curtain was replaced by what some called a "Zion DMZ"—the walls could come down, but children were still prohibited from sitting within 10 feet of a bar. Despite the partial nature of the reform, restaurateurs were rightly relieved to catch up to the rest of the country when it came to the aesthetics of the bar.
But bad ideas never truly go away, especially when the government is involved. In an attempt to create a new banquet license, which would allow restaurants to host private parties on their premises, a newly proposed bill in the Utah Legislature would require every restaurant to build a wall that blocks off its banquet room from the rest of the establishment.
The similarities between the original Zion Curtain and this new proposal are impossible to ignore. For their part, the bill's proponents insist that it is not a wall but merely a room, despite the statutory language itself calling for a "permanent, opaque, floor-to-ceiling wall" to ensure the banquet room is "not visible to a patron" elsewhere in the restaurant.
In reality, the only difference between the old Zion Curtain and the new one is that the new version is likely to cost even more money for restaurants to build given that it must block off an entire room rather than just the bar area. Restaurateurs in the state are trying to sound the alarm, pointing out the unworkability of servers trying to deliver large quantities of food and beverages efficiently to a banquet room with a wall in the way.
As if resurrecting the Zion Curtain isn't bad enough, the same bill also seeks to block the sale of all mini-bottles of liquor in Utah once and for all. Last year, the Utah Department of Alcoholic Beverage Services Commission (DABS) solicited public comments about whether mini-bottles should be allowed in the state again after a decadeslong hiatus. By over a 2–1 margin, commenters favored reintroducing mini-bottles.
Although DABS was deemed to have the legal authority to greenlight mini-bottle sales, the agency backed away from the issue after facing pressure from state lawmakers. Now, along with a new Zion Curtain, those lawmakers are poised to enact a permanent ban on mini-bottles in the Beehive State.
Utahns have suffered for decades as the punchline of jokes about the Zion Curtain. They had finally appeared to loose the bonds of such mockery when the Curtain fell. Now, thanks to their government, the joke's on them again.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Getting buzzed in Utah, in public or private, has always been a challenge. At least the mullahs in SLC don't cut off the hands of sinners.
I am making a real GOOD MONEY ($550 to $750 / hr) online from my laptop. Last month I GOT chek of nearly 85000$, this online work is simple and straightforward, don't have to go OFFICE, Its home online job. You become independent after joining this JOB. I really thanks to my FRIEND who refer me this SITE. I hope you also got what I...go to home media tech tab for more detail reinforce your heart......
Click the link—————————————>>> GOOGLE WORK
Those bars are private companies who chose to put up that curtain.
Considering that LDS church rules Utah, it is no surprise that it has an irrational take on Demon Rum and all other forms of alcohol.
Do the legislators in Utah get elected by the citizens of the state, or do they inherit their positions or come to them by divine right?
If they elect their legislators, they have no right to bitch about what the legislators do to them. If they allow a system of rule by divine right, they doubly deserve whatever good their rulers decide to do to them.
People generally get the government they are fit for. And there being neither a wall nor an established exit tax barring those who don’t deserve that type government from fleeing such a state, why do they remain? But the cost of moving/escaping?!? Hell, freedom isn’t free – it never has been!
If they elect their legislators, they have no right to bitch about what the legislators do to them.
Yes, they do. See the First Amendment and the equivalent provision(s) of the Utah State Constitution.
[T]here being neither a wall nor an established exit tax barring those who don’t deserve that type government from fleeing such a state, why do they remain?
Perhaps they want to make Utah better and/or they can't afford to leave. You sound like a statist. The government can do whatever it wants and if you don't like it, get out. In a representative democracy, individuals can choose to leave, but that is not their only option (this is not a reference to violence).
“If they elect their legislators, they have no right to bitch about what the legislators do to them.”
I guess if they practiced Athenian democracy or something, but we supposedly have constitutional democracy where the government is constrained from passing laws that infringe on individual (and minority) rights.
Yours is a particularly inane comment about if you think for even half a minute: Everybody has a fundamental right to bitch about what the legislators do to them. Pretty sure that is enshrined in the First Amendment. Maybe you think they don’t have a moral right to complain, but they certainly have it as a matter of actual right, and to insiste otherwise is the single most antilibertarian position I could imagine being articulated here.
Bitching about things is pretty much a required prelude to changing them. Complaining to try to change things to be more free is pretty much all anyone in the commentariat does.
So, they elect idiots, knowing they are idiots, then have a right to complain that "they're idiots?" Just wanted to make sure I understood your comment.
The banquet wall is a good thing: if your bishop pops into the restaurant, it might keep him from catching you having a Coke.
I quit working at shoprite and now I make $65-85 per/h. How? I’m working online! My work didn’t exactly make me happy so I decided to take a chance on something new… after 4 years it was so hard to quit my day job but now I couldn’t be happier.
Here’s what I do……………>>> http://www.jobsrevenue.com
the walls could come down, but children were still prohibited from sitting within 10 feet of a bar.
I'd like to see an explanation of why laws like this that exist in staunchly religious red states with a history of alcohol prohibition also exist in bluer-than-blue-found-in-nature blue states.
There's something here that's transcending "normal" right/left politics.
There isn't really any such thing as a red or blue state. In reality, they are all purple. For example, the most Republican state, Wyoming, has only 59% Republicans.
There is no red/blue. What there is is rural/urban.
What really surprises me, especially as someone who grew up in the Sixties, is that there isn’t a deeper young vs. old divide in American politics.
Both major parties are dominated by old geezers, and the young are getting stuck with the bill for taking care of the old (although they may not realize it yet).
What really surprises me, especially as someone who grew up in the Sixties, is that there isn’t a deeper young vs. old divide in American politics.
Oh, but there is. The pronoun showdown. It's going to come to a head like an angry boil before too long.
You may be right.
Kids as young as six or seven are being encouraged to find their gender identity. When these people become adults we’re in for some surprises. I’m not looking forward to it.
That ignores the mathematical reality of our democratic system.
Sure, Washington (my state) is "purple" but as the old local political adage goes: To win in Washington, you just need to carry everything you can see from the Space Needle. Sure, by population we may be... I have no idea so i'll make this up: 59% Democrat. From a standpoint of winning elections in the governors office, and the state legislature, it's way, WAY more than that. We haven't had a Republican governor since 1985.
So my point about this is... how do we get these ridiculous "10 feet" laws repealed, even where Democrats have supermajorities?
Those types of laws tend to be local ordinances, not statewide. Is there a particular example of such a statewide law in Washington state that you can give?
I can't give you a specific RCW, but in Washington State (including Seattle) there are stupid little barriers between the eating areas and "the bar" and "minors not allowed past this point" and the bar is literally ten feet away.
I THINK this might be it.
whereas Idaho, a red state, minors can sit at the bar, but they just can't order a drink... the way god intended. I just don't get it.
Do you guys say Worshington or is that a midwest thing?
People around here think I'm odd because I pronounce your southern neighbor with a gun not a gone.
I'm not a native, although I moved here before most commenters were probably born: late 80s. There are local who pronounce it Worshington. I remember running into that in the 80s and 90s, but I live in Seattle and probably a good chunk of people I know are like me: non-natives. Sort of like moving to LA, almost no one is FROM LA.
That's a good question as to how the local pronounce Oregon. I personally pronounce it GUN, but I'm from New Mexico, near the southern border. Make of that what you will. I do hear both though.
Looeeville Louavllle
I’ve lived in Maine over half my life and I still hear people argue over how to pronounce Bangor.
Bang-or
Bang-er
Bang-ah
In Idaho, that can mean there’s no regulation, but a lot of the time it can also mean there’s a regulation but nobody is complying with or enforcing it.
Is there a way to navigate backwards from the statutes to see the bills that created the statute?
It’s still an advance for liberty. Presumably before this, banquet rooms weren’t allowed at all. No restaurant has to install a banquet room, so nobody’s freedom is decreased by this measure.
So 35 fewer restaurants and 20 fewer bars would be allowed without this bill's passage, and patrons would not be allowed to take their drink to their table with or without an escort. So the whole complaint is that it doesn't advance liberty enough? How much is enough?
You might as well complain about a tax cut for not abolishing the tax completely. Or a troop reduction in a foreign land for not being a complete pullout. Or an increase in the magazine size allowed in guns, etc.
You've had lots of other articles lauding permissions that've been granted contingent on satisfying certain conditions, like for instance loosening of zoning restrictions for builders who meet certain conditions, or the licensing of facilities for administration of psychedelics, or allowing immigrants into the USA who meet certain conditions. Why is this banquet room licensing any different?
“Presumably before this, banquet rooms weren’t allowed at all.”
I don’t think that is implied. To check, I just searched for banquet rooms in Salt Lake City, and there are many available in restaurants, hotels, and even in the “Joseph Smith Memorial Building”.
My condolences to everyone in Utah who has to suffer through this. The worst part is they make it hard to drink while suffering through it.
Drinking doesn’t solve problems.
Not drinking doesn't solve problems either.
I quit working at shoprite and now I make $65-85 per/h. How? I’m working online! My work didn’t exactly make me happy so I decided to take a chance on something new… after 4 years it was so hard to quit my day job but now I couldn’t be happier.
Here’s what I do……………>>> http://www.jobsrevenue.com
This is why I could not vote for Mitt Romney, even if I ever wanted to.
The angel they talk about was called Moroni, which is why they should be called Morons. A true lesson on sheer human stupidity versus reasonableness. Send them all to re-education camps.
Such a libertarian sentiment…
Walls work, quick somebody tell Joe Biden before the next election!
i get paid $550+ per day using my mobile in my part time. Last month i got my 4th paycheck of $17723 and i just do this work in my part time. its an easy and awesome home based job.
Anybody can do this…….. http://Www.Smartjob1.com