• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Contact Us
  • Post A Job

Agency Checklists

Massachusetts Insurance News & Job Opportunities

  • AC Interviews
  • Agency M&A
  • Career News
  • CAR News
  • DOI News
  • Coverage Cases
  • Innovation
  • InsurOp-Eds
  • AC Podcast
You are here: Home / Legislative & Economic News / Packies, Restaurants Divided Over Takeout Drinks

Packies, Restaurants Divided Over Takeout Drinks

June 2, 2023 by State House News Service

Fate Of Pandemic Trend Up To The Legislature

STATE HOUSE, BOSTON, MAY 31, 2023…..It’s the restaurants versus the packies.

Lawmakers considering whether to continue allowing patrons to purchase beer, wine and cocktails to go with their takeout food orders must weigh the interests of the Massachusetts Restaurant Association, which supports the idea, against those of the Massachusetts Package Store Association, whose leader warned Wednesday that keeping the option around would contribute to the shops’ “death by a thousand cuts.”

Packies, Restaurants Divided Over Takeout Drinks
Massachusetts Package Store Association Executive Director Robert Mellion (left) briefs lawmakers Wednesday on the group’s priorities, including its opposition to extending takeout drink sales at bars and restaurants. He is joined by Huntington Wine and Spirits owner Steve Rubin (center) and Sav Mor owner Ben Weiner (right). [Chris Lisinski/SHNS]

Several bills before the Consumer Protection Committee would once again extend authorization for restaurants and bars with liquor licenses to sell takeaway beer, wine and cocktails or make it altogether permanent.

“Cocktails to go has proven to be extremely popular with guests across our industry. Our guests love the convenience of getting a restaurant-quality drink with their food orders, and it has provided a much-needed revenue boost to our industry,” said Mass. Restaurant Association Director of Government Affairs Jessica Muradian.

She added that many diners want “unique cocktails that they can only get from these restaurants,” rather than more ubiquitous drinks available at package stores and other retailers.

The Package Store Association argued instead Wednesday that the emergency conditions that prompted the temporary policy change have long since subsided.

In the past three years, Mass. Package Store Association Executive Director Robert Mellion said, the availability of to-go drinks has led to multiple incidents of underage sales, typically involving third-party delivery services.

“It’s death by 1,000 cuts,” Mellion said.

He sought to draw a distinction between the concept of takeout drinks and the actual practice since it was implemented, saying some establishments offer only “a couple of nips and some water.”

“That’s what hurts. It’s not a nice cocktail that has been put together in a nice package that is going with a pizza. It’s the quick drinks to go that’s actually really prepackaged alcohol,” Mellion said. “It’s the large chain restaurants, not the independent Joe’s Pizza, that is the problem here.”

While Mellion submitted written testimony indicating the package store group “strongly opposes” extending or making permanent takeout beer, wine and cocktails, he told lawmakers that “drinks to go can probably be something that can be lived with” if policymakers “rein in third-party delivery.”

Muradian said Wednesday that 39 states implemented temporary takeout drink provisions during the public health emergency, 18 of which have since enacted it permanently.

“We hope Massachusetts will be the next one,” she said.

Massachusetts first allowed the sale of takeout beer, wine and then mixed drinks early in the pandemic, when many businesses were forced to close to limit the spread of the highly infectious virus.

Lawmakers have delayed the policy’s expiration several times since then, most recently in a spending bill Gov. Maura Healey signed in March that will keep it in place until April 1, 2024.

Rep. Paul Frost, who filed one of the bills that would make takeout drinks a permanent option (H 295), said restaurateurs have been left in the lurch by the repeated uncertainty about when or whether Beacon Hill would act.

“I know there are businesses, for example, that have now made specialty containers for their takeout alcohol with their names on it. Now they’re investing money into it. It would just really, for lack of a better term, suck if all of a sudden we just arbitrarily didn’t get around to renewing it. And we all know what can happen,” Frost, an Auburn Republican, said. “We all know how deadline politics works in this particular sector. Sometimes, yes, it’s going to be part of a bigger bill, to get it done to extend it a year or two. But the problem is that when we do that, we also know that it may not happen because something gets held up in the House or the Senate, there’s a disagreement, and all of a sudden now these people can’t do it anymore.”

“I think that I think we can just take that doubt away from them,” he added.

The restaurant and package store industry groups are not completely at odds, however.

Both associations endorsed legislation (H 369) that would allow an alcohol seller to rely upon an out-of-state driver’s license for the purposes of criminal liability, which they said would effectively bring Massachusetts in line with every single other state that recognizes those licenses for sale of boozy beverages.

Mellion in his written testimony slammed the current policy of not relying on out-of-state licenses as “archaic and irrational.”

“Passports from other countries are valid forms of ID, so we cannot accept a license from New Hampshire, but we can accept a passport from Finland,” Muradian said. “Massachusetts has positioned itself as a world-class destination. It is time we update our alcohol ID laws to reflect our global and regional economy.”

Primary Sidebar

Search Our Archives Here

Job Board

Career News

Coverys Elects Insurance Executive Michael L. Boguski to Board of Directors

Paul Collins, Northeast Area President at HUB International, professional headshot

Hub International Names Paul Collins Northeast Area President

Kelley O'Cooner: Plymouth Rock's new state sales manager for Massachusetts

Kelley O’Connor: Plymouth Rock’s New MA State Sales Manager

Liberty Mutual construction insurance leadership focusing on large infrastructure and commercial projects

Liberty Mutual Insurance Appoints Amy Gross General Manager, North American Construction

View All

MA Division of Insurance Advertisements

Official notice on Commonwealth of Massachusetts Division of Insurance letterhead dated July 1, 2026, regarding license amendment for OBI America Insurance Company at Plymouth, MN address for Accident and Health insurance in the Commonwealth.
Official notice from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Division of Insurance about OBI National Insurance Company’s license amendment, dated July 1, 2026, with address block and filing instructions.
Official Massachusetts Division of Insurance notice to General Security National Insurance Company about amending its foreign license to transact property and casualty insurance, dated July 1, 2026.

Listen Now

Sponsor

Interviews

From Nuptials, Tickets, and Taxes to Trusted Advisor: One Agency’s Unique Path to P&C Success

A Conversation with Evan Silverio, President & CEO of Silverio Insurance Group

Deland, Gibson Celebrates 125 Years: A Conversation with CEO Chip Gibson

The Fourth-Generation Family-Owned Agency is Based in Wellesley

Talking with Richard Welch: Growth and Innovation at Hospitality Mutual | Agency Checklists

Talking with Richard Welch: Growth and Innovation at Hospitality Mutual

Mr. Welch is CEO of Massachusetts-based Hospitality Insurance Group

Born and Bred in the Bay State: The Special Agent Story

Our Latest Agency Interview is with the Founder & President of Special Agent

A Conversation with Daniel C. Bridge – The 2023 Insurance Professional of the Year

Daniel Bridge is Board Chair, President, and CEO of Vermont Mutual Insurance Group

Making The Leap From Corporate to Entrepreneur: Nadeen Vella On Building NaVella Insurance From Scratch

Making The Leap From Corporate to Entrepreneur: Nadeen Vella On Building NaVella Insurance From Scratch

Our latest Agency Interview is with Nadeen Vella, the founder and owner of a virtual scratch independent agency.

View All

InsurOp-Eds

Bindable President Jean Marie Lovett

Bouncing Back: Working to Recover and Rebuild Following COVID-19

By Jean-Marie Lovett

InsurOp-Ed: Transitioning to The Gallagher Way

By Tim Lodge

InsurOp-Ed: Horrible Policy Forms and Endorsements To Avoid or Be Wary Of

By Bill Wilson

InsurOp-Ed: Understanding The Insurance Supply Chain

By Peter MacDonald

View All

In Memoriam

William R Berkley founder of W R Berkley Corporation and leader in commercial insurance industry

W. R. Berkley Corporation Announces the Passing of Its Founder and Executive Chairman, William R. Berkley

Michael R Quinn longtime leader of Allan M Walker Insurance Agency in Taunton Massachusetts

Taunton Insurance Leader Michael R. Quinn Dies at 70

Smiling older man with short hair wearing a black zip-front pullover, seated indoors at a table.

In Memoriam: Robert Pangione, 1935-2026

Footer

Contact us

We offer a variety of ways to get help promote your company or product.

Announcements
Email Sponsorships
Partnerships
Custom Collaborations

*Affiliate Disclosure

Please note that any of Agency Checklists’ articles might contain one or more affiliate links. This means that any subsequent purchase resulting from these links may result in a commission for us, but at no additional cost to you. For example, as an Amazon Associate, Agency Checklists earns a commission from all qualifying purchases. By working with affiliates we can continue to keep Agency Checklists subscription free. Thank you for your support.

Explore Our Archives

Copyright © 2026 · Agency Checklists · All rights reserved.

Loading Comments...