FOOD & DRINK

For first time since Prohibition, you can buy alcohol on Christmas

Amy Haneline
amy.haneline@indystar.com

Eat, drink and be merry. And yes, now that includes alcohol on Christmas Day.

In case you’ve forgotten, last December Gov. Mike Pence signed House Bill 1542 that removed a longtime state provision that made it illegal to sell alcoholic beverages from 3 a.m. Dec. 25 to 7 a.m. Dec. 26. The bill went into effect on July 1, making this Christmas the first to allow sales since Prohibition.

Although many businesses are closed on Christmas Day — restaurants, bars, liquor stores and groceries that open will be allowed to sell alcohol.

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However, the state's Sunday carry-out restrictions remain. Corporal Brandon Thomas with Indiana State Excise Police wrote in an email: "If Christmas falls on a Sunday, bars, restaurants and other locations that sell alcoholic beverages for on-premise consumption would still be able to do so. Liquor stores, convenience stores, grocery stores, and other retailers that sell carry out would not."

Christmas falls on a Sunday in 2016.

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Grocery, convenience stores can't sell cold beer, appeals court says

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