Liquor Licenses and Permits. The Liquor and Cannabis Board (LCB) issues a variety of liquor licenses and permits authorizing the service, sale, or use of alcoholic beverages in different circumstances.
Permits. Examples of available permits include a banquet permit, a permit for an event held at a business without a liquor license, a permit for nonprofit organizations to auction wine, and a permit for bed and breakfast lodging facilities. After paying a $75 annual fee and receiving the applicable permit, a bed and breakfast lodging facility may donate or serve wine or beer for free to overnight guests of the facility if the wine or beer is for consumption on the premises. A bed and breakfast lodging facility means a facility offering from one-to-eight lodging units and breakfast to travelers and guests. Fees from liquor licenses and permits are deposited into the Liquor Revolving Fund.
Wine Distributor License. After paying a $600 annual fee and receiving the applicable license, a wine distributor may sell and export wine purchased from licensed Washington wineries, wine certificate of approval holders, licensed wine importers, or suppliers of foreign wine located outside of the U.S. to licensed wine retailers and other wine distributors.
Short-Term Rentals. A 2019 law regulating short-term rentals defines "short-term rental" as a lodging use, that is not a hotel, motel, or bed and breakfast, in which a dwelling unit, or portion of a dwelling unit, that is offered or provided to a guest by a short-term rental operator for a fee for fewer than 30 consecutive nights. Short-term rental does not include:
"Operator" is defined as any person who receives payment for owning or operating a dwelling unit, or portion of a dwelling unit, as a short-term rental unit. "Guest" is defined as any person or persons renting a short-term rental unit.
Liquor Licenses and Permits. Permit. LCB may issue an annual special permit, after collecting a $75 fee, allowing a short-term rental operator to provide one complimentary bottle of wine to rental guests who are at least 21 years old. A single permit applies to all rental properties owned or operated by the short-term rental operator and identified in the permit application.
One complimentary bottle of wine per booking may be provided regardless of the total number of rental guests and may only be provided after an operator or staff person of the short-term rental, who is present at the property, verifies that each rental guest who will consume the wine is at least 21 years old by checking their identification at the time of arrival. The guests must be informed of the complimentary wine bottle and that opening or consuming it in a public place is illegal and must not have declined it. The wine bottle may be consumed on, or removed from, the rental property premises. A permit holder may purchase wine from licensed wine distributors and other authorized wine retailers and suppliers.
For the purposes of the new liquor permit, the terms "short-term rental," "operator," and "guest" have the same meanings provided in the short-term rental laws.
Wine Distributor License. Licensed wine distributors may sell wine to holders of annual special permits.
PRO: This bill allows our short-term rentals to provide a service with specific guardrails. The short-term rental operator must ensure the guests like the wine before providing it, and they must check their I.D. The money received goes to tourism.
CON: There are some severe functionality concerns with this bill even after being improved in the House. We are talking about innkeepers not bartenders or people who are professionally-trained to read identification. There is nothing in the bill requiring the short-term rental operators to be trained. At least half of the $75 fee should go toward LCB enforcement and training. This bill is unnecessary and creates a new class of licensees.
OTHER: LCB was available to answer questions.