All Roll Calls
Yes: 315 • No: 0
Sponsored By: Gretchen M. Bulova (Democratic)
Became Law
Alcoholic beverage control; banquet license; municipality or nonprofit organization. Allows a manufacturer, bottler, broker, importer, or wholesaler to sponsor or provide support, including equipment, staff, financial, and other support, for a special event for which a municipality or nonprofit organization has been issued a banquet license when such special event is to be held on the grounds of a museum or a government-registered national, state, or local historic site at which the municipality or nonprofit organization is licensed to operate a gift shop, provided that any retail license issued to the premises has been deactivated by the Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Control Authority for the duration of such special event. The bill limits such municipalities or nonprofit organizations to no more than eight banquet licenses for such special events per year. This bill is identical to SB 532.
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7 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 3 costs, 2 mixed.
Wineries and breweries can get up to eight banquet licenses each year for Board‑approved events. One license covers an event of up to three straight days. Distillers can also get up to eight such licenses. Spirits samples are capped at 0.5 oz per product (1.5 oz if mixed) and 3 oz per patron per day.
The Board sets container, label, and seal rules for alcoholic drinks. Powdered or crystalline alcohol cannot be sold in or shipped into Virginia.
The Board can set and collect permit and application fees. It can also set other charges tied to its stores and services. The Board can assess civil penalties for violations. It can set minimum food-sale rules that retail licensees must meet. Mixed beverage casino licensees must pay any Board enforcement costs above the state license fee.
The Board can write rules, hold hearings, and issue subpoenas. It can use consent agreements that are not reviewed under the Administrative Process Act. It can seek court orders to stop alcohol-related nuisances. It can grant, suspend, deactivate, and revoke alcohol licenses.
The Board does not grant retail alcohol licenses to manufacturers, bottlers, wholesalers, their officers, or related companies under common control. The law lists narrow exceptions, such as dining cars or boats and certain brewery, winery, distillery, and farm‑winery activities. One out‑of‑state winery may qualify when it buys from a Virginia wholesale wine licensee. These rules keep production and wholesale separate from retail.
Manufacturers, bottlers, brokers, importers, and wholesalers may sponsor special events at a museum or a registered historic site. A municipality or nonprofit must hold the banquet license and operate a gift shop at the site. Any retail license at that site is deactivated during the event. The host is limited to eight such banquet licenses each year.
The Board can buy, import, and sell distilled spirits, and sell mixers and some Virginia Tourism items. It decides where state-run stores open and runs warehouses and deliveries. It can buy, lease, or sell property and operate distilleries. It controls how alcohol is possessed, sold, moved, and delivered. It can sign contracts and accept grants to run these operations. These powers can affect what is sold, where stores are, and prices.
Gretchen M. Bulova
Democratic • House
There are no cosponsors for this bill.
All Roll Calls
Yes: 315 • No: 0
Senate vote • 2/24/2026
Passed Senate Block Vote
Yes: 39 • No: 0
Senate vote • 2/23/2026
Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 2nd reading)
Yes: 37 • No: 0
Senate vote • 2/23/2026
Passed by for the day Block Vote (Voice Vote)
Yes: 0 • No: 0
Senate vote • 2/20/2026
Reported from Rehabilitation and Social Services Block Vote
Yes: 15 • No: 0
House vote • 2/11/2026
Passed House Block Vote
Yes: 98 • No: 0
House vote • 2/11/2026
Read third time and passed House Block Vote
Yes: 96 • No: 0
House vote • 2/5/2026
Reported from General Laws
Yes: 21 • No: 0
House vote • 2/3/2026
Subcommittee recommends reporting
Yes: 9 • No: 0
Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP0805)
Approved by Governor-Chapter 805 (effective 7/1/2026)
Governor's Action Deadline 11:59 p.m., April 13, 2026
Enrolled Bill communicated to Governor on March 10, 2026
Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (HB1343)
Bill text as passed House and Senate (HB1343ER)
Enrolled
Signed by President
Signed by Speaker
Passed Senate Block Vote (39-Y 0-N 0-A)
Read third time
Passed by for the day Block Vote (Voice Vote)
Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 2nd reading) (37-Y 0-N 0-A)
Rules suspended
Reported from Rehabilitation and Social Services Block Vote (15-Y 0-N)
Referred to Committee on Rehabilitation and Social Services
Constitutional reading dispensed (on 1st reading)
Passed House Block Vote (98-Y 0-N 0-A)
Reconsideration of passage agreed to by House
Read third time and passed House Block Vote (96-Y 0-N 0-A)
Read second time and engrossed
Read first time
Reported from General Laws (21-Y 0-N)
Subcommittee recommends reporting (9-Y 0-N)
Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (HB1343)
Chaptered
4/13/2026
Enrolled
2/26/2026
Introduced
1/19/2026
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