COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - Those tiny
bottles of liquor will disappear from bar shelves starting Jan. 1 as part
of a bill Gov. Mark Sanford signed into law on Tuesday.
Voters asked for the legislation when they approved a state
constitutional amendment last fall to end a state law that required bars
to serve booze from the 1.7 ounce bottles. South Carolina was the only
state that served liquor only from minibottles.
Lawmakers negotiated into the final
hours of the session last week, agreeing to allow retail liquor stores the
new benefit of delivering minibottles to bars beginning July 1. Retailers
will be able to distribute larger bottles of liquor to bars, and the
public would be able to purchase minibottles at stores as of Jan. 1.
Wholesalers were left out of the mix, but that issue will be revisited
during the 2007 legislative session.
The governor was pleased to sign the law getting rid of the minibottle
monopoly because he had been pushing for it since his campaign, Sanford
spokesman Will Folks said.
"It's another step in taking our state out of the dark ages in addition
to keeping government from mandating that our restaurants pour the
stiffest drinks in the country," Folks said.
Sanford also signed 24 other bills into law on Tuesday, including
legislation that makes trafficking or manufacturing methamphetamines a
violent crime; a bill that strengthens rules to keep better track of
convicted sex offenders; and a measure that abolishes the Orangeburg
County Board of Education.