New York Gov. Cuomo says state has suspended 27 liquor licenses for violating social distancing rules

Health, Fitness & Food

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo speaks during a COVID-19 briefing on July 6, 2020 in New York City.

David Dee Delgado | Getty Images

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Tuesday the state liquor authority has suspended 27 bar and restaurant alcohol licenses for violating social distancing rules as public officials try to keep the coronavirus outbreak under control. 

“I’m sorry it’s come to this, but it’s a dangerous situation and I’ve said it many, many times,” Cuomo said during a press conference call. “We never opened bars. This was a violation by them from the beginning.” 

In just New York City and Long Island, the state took action by suspending liquor licenses in four bars and restaurants. The governor listed three in Queens and one in Suffolk county.

“We are quite serious about it,” he said, adding that the state has filed 410 charges against New York eating and drinking establishments. 

Unlike other states, New York does not have separate liquor licenses for bars and restaurants, according to Cuomo.

“We never authorized bar operations,” he said. “By the words themselves, outdoor dining is not a bar operation. The word is dining. You don’t dine when you go to a restaurant to drink. That is drinking, and it would’ve been outside drinking that we authorized.”

Bars “exploited the existing regulations” by taking outdoor dining as an opportunity to facilitate outdoor drinking, the governor said. He added that this is “now a significant problem” as more young people are seen drinking in open spaces. 

“It’s younger people in bars, that is the issue. And we know the younger people can transmit it easily and that’s where the problem is coming from,” he said.

Cuomo warned Monday that groups of young people congregating at bars and restaurants, especially in the New York City area, are “a threat” to the state’s reopening plans. 

He said his office received reports of crowding and mask violations over the weekend in the New York City area, and in some instances, there were as many as 700 people drinking in an open space and violating the state’s open container law.

“We will have to roll back the bar and restaurant opening if the congregations continue, if the local governments don’t stop it, that is what is going to happen,” Cuomo said Monday at a news briefing.

This is a developing story. Check back here for updates.

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