Utah ushers in a new era of choice for bar patrons

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Nick Jennings, left, and Joe Aragon, both of Salt Lake City, enjoy a meal and drinks while watching sports at the Fiddler's Elbow in Salt Lake City on Saturday, June 27, 2009. On Wednesday, July 1, getting into a bar in Utah will be as simple as showing the doorman a valid ID. That's when a new state law will go into effect eliminating a requirement that has made every bar in Utah a private club for the past 40 years. ((AP Photo/The Salt Lake Tribune, Jim Urquhart) )
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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — For the last 40 years, dropping into a bar in Utah has been a complicated affair: Patrons have to fill out an application, pay a fee and become a member before they can go in for a drink.

It is one of several restrictive rules governing alcohol consumption in Utah that made the heavily Mormon state one of the toughest places in the nation to get a drink.

But some of that will change on Wednesday when a new state law kicks in eliminating the need for people to become members of bars to go inside.

"I've owned clubs for eight years now, and I never thought this was going to happen," said Jason Rasmussen, owner of A Bar Named Sue. "This is huge."

Bars and drinkers are so thrilled by the new rules that they are planning what is expected to be the largest pub crawl in state history Wednesday, complete with free shuttle buses and taxis to 16 bars to commemorate what some are calling Private Club Independence Day.

The change is being made in an effort to make the state more appealing to tourists and to give businesses and employees considering moving here one fewer reason to stay away.

"We're rolling out the welcome mat to the world," Gov. Jon Huntsman, a nondrinking Mormon, said in a statement to The Associated Press.

Huntsman wanted to scrap the private club system to improve economic development ever since taking office in 2005, but it wasn't politically feasible until he won a second term in November by the largest margin in state history.

Huntsman had pledged not to seek a third termand was willing to spend political capital in a state primarily comprised of teetotalers to usher in the changes.

About 60 percent of Utah residents and more than 80 percent of state lawmakers belong to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which tells its members to abstain from alcohol and has always helped shape alcohol policy in the state.

"This is going to be quite the legacy for him," said Scott Beck, CEO of the Salt Lake Convention and Visitors Center.

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