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Council sets July 9 cure deadlines for dozens of restaurants after reviewing late alcohol-reporting cases

June 18, 2026 | Tampa, Hillsborough County, Florida


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Council sets July 9 cure deadlines for dozens of restaurants after reviewing late alcohol-reporting cases
City staff told Tampa City Council on June 18 that roughly 50 establishments initially failed to submit required annual sales reports and commercial insurance audits under City Code sections 27-318 and 27-319; council then handled the list in categories and voted on several grouped motions.

Susan Johnson-Velez of the legal department explained the code basis for the hearings and said the reporting requirements exist so an "R" (special restaurant) designation can be confirmed as primarily a food-based business. LaChone Dock of Development Coordination presented staff's spreadsheet and said after follow-up investigation several businesses either no longer sold alcohol or were closed; council approved cancelling hearings for seven such locations.

For a large subgroup of 26 businesses that had submitted records after the January 31 deadline, staff recommended—and council approved—a two-part action: find those locations in violation of the deadline but impose no suspension. LaChone Dock told council other groups remained partially or wholly noncompliant and recommended a structured cure period.

Council approved staff's plan to allow certain late filers until July 9, 2026, to submit missing documentation. Dock said the categories carried different recommended suspensions if businesses did not comply: some would face a five-day suspension beginning July 10, others a 15-day suspension. Council read names aloud for the groups, received on-the-record confirmations from many owners that they would comply by July 9, and passed motions implementing the cure period and conditional suspensions.

Representative on-the-record exchanges included business owners who said they had already transmitted documents or would work with staff to resolve missing items; for example, one owner said, "I already submit the commercial insurance audit. I'll find out why they haven't received it yet." (owner at SEG 1302-1307). Staff said late fees apply after Jan. 31 (first-time $100, then $500 for subsequent occurrences).

What to watch: Council established a clear administrative timeline—July 9 to cure missing reports or pay late fees—and left enforcement tools (five- or 15-day suspensions beginning July 10) available for businesses that do not comply. The hearing process included public identification of named establishments and grouped council motions to cancel some hearings, find violations for others, and set cure periods for the remainder.

Sources: Staff presentation and public testimony during Item 44; multiple council motions and roll-call confirmations.

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