WeVote

Bill

Bill

SB 1013

SB 1013 - This act modifies the factors a court shall consider when awarding custody to parents, including the willingness and ability of parents to cooperate in the rearing of their child; the child's physical, emotional, educational, and other needs; the mental health or substance use history experienced by either parent; the history of domestic and child abuse of any individuals involved; the distance between the residences of the parents; and the reasonable input of the child as to the child's custodian. This act is identical to SB 805 (2025) and SCS/SBs 744 & 1026 (2024), substantially similar to provisions of the perfected SS/SCS/SB 129 (2023), and similar to SB 1371 (2026) and SB 638 (2025). SARAH HASKINS

2026 Regular Session Introduced by Maggie Nurrenbern

SB 1013 temporarily prevents the Falls Road Class B–D–7 license from expiring through July 1, 2026 to complete ownership transfer and renewal at the same location.

Second Read and Referred S Judiciary and Civil and Criminal Jurisprudence Committee
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · SB 1013

Summary — SB 1013 (Chapter 827, 2025)

Baltimore City — Alcoholic Beverages — License Extension

Purpose / Intent

SB 1013 temporarily preserves an existing Baltimore City alcoholic beverages license so that a transfer of ownership and renewal can be completed at the same location. It prevents the license from being treated as expired while parties finalize the transfer/renewal.

Key provisions

  • Designates that a Class B–D–7 license issued for premises on the 5700 block of Falls Road in Baltimore City "shall be considered unexpired" until July 1, 2026, for the sole purpose of completing a transfer of ownership and renewal at that same location.
  • Temporarily overrides § 12–1705 of the Alcoholic Beverages and Cannabis Article for this specific license.
  • Effective date: July 1, 2025.
  • Termination: The Act is temporary and automatically abrogates on July 31, 2026 (i.e., remains in effect roughly 1 year and 1 month).

Background / Current law context

  • Under Baltimore City rules and state law, license transfers generally must be completed within 180 days of Board approval, with a possible extension due to hardship up to 270 days. Failure to complete transfer in time can render a license expired.
  • A Class B–D–7 license authorizes retail sale of beer, wine, and liquor for on‑ and off‑premises consumption. The annual license fee is reported as $2,336 (as noted in the fiscal note).

Who is affected

  • Primary: the current license holder and prospective transferee(s) of the Class B–D–7 license at the specified Falls Road premises.
  • Secondary: Baltimore City Board of License Commissioners (administrative/record-keeping) and local residents/businesses in the immediate area.
  • Effect is narrowly targeted to a single license/location and does not change statewide licensing rules beyond this temporary exemption.

Fiscal and operational impact

  • State: No fiscal effect.
  • Baltimore City: No material effect on city finances or operations (per the Department of Legislative Services fiscal note).
  • Small businesses: Minimal impact — the primary effect is to enable a business sale/renewal process to proceed without loss of the existing license.

Legislative status / history

  • Companion bill: HB 1488.
  • Enacted: Approved by the Governor and filed as Chapter 827 on May 20, 2025.
  • Effective: July 1, 2025; terminates July 31, 2026.

Practical effect

SB 1013 provides a limited, time‑bound extension preventing a specific Class B–D–7 license on the 5700 block of Falls Road from expiring while transfer and renewal are completed, avoiding the need for reapplication or potential interruption of liquor sales tied to that license.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

Sign in to ask a question.