On Wednesday, the state's legislature approved a bill that would legalize public drinking of alcoholic beverages in specially designated "outdoor consumption areas" in cities with more than 35,000 residents. The bill now awaits Gov. John Kasich's signature for approval, and a spokesman for the governor told The Huffington Post that Kasich is expected to sign it shortly.
Assuming he does, Ohio will become the 18th state to allow public drinking in any form and the seventh state to permit public drinking in certain tourist-friendly parts of the city, which are often called "entertainment districts." Such districts were inspired by the success that New Orleans and Las Vegas have had attracting tourists to their streets with the promise of legal open-air drinking.
The first of these districts, 4th Street Live in Louisville, Kentucky, opened in 2003. It did so much to drum up business in the area that many other cities followed suit. Now, the entertainment district on once-blighted Beale Street in Memphis, Tennessee, attracts an estimated 4 million visitors a year.
Versions of the outdoor consumption area bill have been circulating through the Ohio Senate and House since late 2013, but this is the first one to be approved by both legislative bodies. The Senate passed it unanimously on April 22, while the House passed it by a vote of 87 to 7. A clause in the bill would allow it to take effect as soon as Kasich signs it.
That should give Cincinnati plenty of time to make its Arena District an outdoor consumption area before the city hosts Major League Baseball's All-Star Game in July. An additional 37 cities -- including Cleveland, the site of the 2016 Republican National Convention -- have populations large enough to establish their own outdoor consumption areas, so the bill has the potential to nearly triple the number of cities across the country with some form of legal public drinking.
Laws against drinking in public were a rarity recently as 1975. State and municipal legislators across the country passed many bans on the activity only after laws against public drunkenness, a related but separate offense, were deemed constitutionally and ethically unsound and repealed in most jurisdictions.
Seen this way, entertainment districts aren't such a novelty after all -- they're a return to the historical status quo, a mark of cities telling residents and tourists alike to let the good times roll again.
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