by Andrew Ramonas December 8, 2015 at 3:00 pm 2 Comments

Adams Morgan Coffee Shop (Photo via Google Maps)Adams Morgan might get another spot to drink booze next year.

Adams Morgan Restaurant & Coffee at 2204 18th St. NW has a liquor license application now on file with the D.C. Alcoholic Beverage Regulation Administration, according to a notice the agency published today.

A representative of the coffee shop wasn’t immediately available to comment.

The D.C. Alcoholic Beverage Control Board is expected to rule on the eatery’s application in the coming months.

Photo via Google Maps

by Andrew Ramonas November 25, 2015 at 3:50 pm 0

Florida Avenue GrillDiners at the Florida Avenue Grill soon might have the option to order something harder than soda with their fried chicken, pork chops and other soul food.

For the first time in its 71-year history, the restaurant at 1100 Florida Ave. NW has applied for a liquor license, according to a notice published by the D.C. Alcoholic Beverage Regulation Administration this week.

Imar Hutchins, who has owned the eatery since 2005, said many of his customers have asked for booze. And without liquor, the grill’s dinner business has become almost “nonexistent,” he said.

“If we want to survive, we have to do it,” he said.

Hutchins said he didn’t know yet what alcoholic drinks he would serve. But the adult beverages wouldn’t become the focus of the restaurant, which has had a dedication to soul food since it opened in 1944.

“We’re not trying to turn it into a bar or anything like that,” he said.

by Tim Regan October 16, 2015 at 12:10 pm 3 Comments

Midtown Partyplex (1219 Connecticut Ave. NW) may harbor multiple “safety concerns,” said Dupont Circle’s ANC 2B during its monthly meeting at the Brookings Institution (1775 Massachusetts Avenue NW) on Wednesday.

The commission voted 4-0-1 to send a letter to the Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) board in advance of an Oct. 21 protest hearing concerning the renewal of Midtown’s alcohol license.

“Since [November 2013], ANC 2B has become aware of numerous other problems at Midtown as documented in ABRA’s investigation history,” reads the letter. “Serious problems requiring ABC Board attention since the ‘expiration’ of the license of the license on Sept. 30, 2013, comprise underage drinking and violence including death, assault on police officers and sexual assault.”

Commissioner Abigail Nichols, 2B-05, is the one who motioned to send the letter.

Nichols noted that the ANC first voted to protest the bar’s license due to noise complaints from neighbors in November, 2013. Since then, she said, the ANC became aware of more serious problems.

“In those two years after, other kinds of operational problems have come to my attention as the commissioner for that area,” she said. “In 2013, there was a brouhaha in which people fighting inside Midtown were thrown out onto the street. One man died. Two police officers went to the hospital,” said Nichols.

“Midtown made the papers again in february about a week after they reopened after they closed down for underage drinking and assorted things,” she added.

“What we are doing here with this letter is not trying them for those things,” Nichols said. “What this is doing is saying to the board, we noticed this pattern, we ask that you take action.”

“This is a very large nightclub with lots of dark corners,” Nichols added. “Commissioner Michael Upright, [2B-04] and I went to the police headquarters Sunday just to see if we were overstating the nature of the problem, but we looked at this list of violations and problems that the police have been called for and I’m confident we’re not overstating the level of problems there.”

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