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Article published Jul 4, 2003
Sanford frees up liquor on
Fourth
Associated Press
CHARLESTON
-- Independence Day takes on a new meaning Friday, the first day in years that
liquor stores will have the freedom to stay open.
For decades, governors have
made the holiday a dry day by forcing 4,000 liquor stores around the state to
shut down.
State law gives governors power "in the interest of law and order
or public morals and decorum" to close liquor stores. They routinely use it on
Christmas Day, Thanksgiving, New Year's Day and July Fourth, officials and
liquor store owners said.
But Gov. Mark Sanford is breaking with tradition.
He wanted to lift "government interference on a nonreligious holiday," Sanford
spokesman Will Folks said. Bars, clubs and restaurants can sell liquor on those
holidays and get an unfair advantage, Folks said.
Some liquor store owners
are eager for the extra business day.
"It's going to be real busy. I'm
definitely going to be open," said Clyde Burris of Burris Liquor Store in
downtown Charleston. In business for 35 years, Burris says it's the first time
he can recall opening on Independence Day.
The liquid commerce, however,
brings fears.
"It will probably increase the risk of more fatalities on the
roadways," said South Carolina Mothers Against Drunk Driving director Donna
Carter of Florence. She said she is not critical
of Sanford or legal alcohol
sales, but worries about crashes tied to drinking.
Sanford delegated the
decision on the issue to Burnet Maybank, his Revenue Department director.
Maybank said he doubts highway safety will be jeopardized. He said he doesn't
see a strong correlation between retail liquor purchases and DUI.
Maybank
didn't expect a spike in liquor sales as a result of allowing the July Fourth
sales and said it probably will be a revenue wash.
Still, the change comes as
the state Highway Patrol is conducting a July Fourth drunken-driving crackdown
dubbed "Sober or Slammer."
Department of Public Safety spokesman Sid Gaulden
said the policy change makes no difference for the "Sober or Slammer"
campaign.
"Drinking and driving is against the law," he said. "We're going to
be out there."