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"It's time for us patriots to rise up": Bar owner leads rally against possible 5-year liquor license loss

Minneapolis — A Minnesota bar owner is girding for a possible five-year suspension of the bar's liquor license for staying open despite COVID-19-related restrictions on indoor service, CBS Minnesota reports. The Interchange Wine and Coffee Bistro in the Minneapolis suburb of Albert Lea continues to defy Governor Tim Walz's executive order.

On Sunday, The Interchange's owner, Lisa Hanson, organized a march to protest the order. Nearly 200 people attended.

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Protest on December 3, 2021 against COVID-linked restrictions on The Interchange Wine and Coffee Bistro in Minneapolis suburb of Albert Lea, Minnesota. CBS Minnesota

"It's time for us patriots to rise up, in a peaceful way of course, and to say, 'Hey, enough is enough,'" Hanson told CBS Minnesota.

A temporary restraining order has been in effect against The Interchange since the middle of last month. The Minnesota Department of Health has suspended its license, and the Minnesota Department of Public Safety intends to suspend its liquor license for 60 days.

Hanson is undeterred.

"We are open for business," she said. "[We're] staying open because we need to make money to pay bills."

Hanson believes the state is unlawfully enforcing an unlawful order.

Further violations put The Interchange at risk of losing its liquor license for five years.

"We're well aware of what the consequences could be," Hanson said. "Either I closed permanently or I opened fully, so I opened fully. … And yes, I knew the risks going into that."

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The Interchange Wine and Coffee Bistro in Albert Lea, a Minneapolis suburb. CBS Minnesota

Hanson readily admits her stand is about principle at least as much as it's about her business. Inside The Interchange, pocket-size United States Constitutions are laid out on a counter, protest T-shirts are on sale and a tip jar's been converted to a legal fund.

"We believe that we will see victory in this," Hanson said.

Hanson is entitled to a court hearing before any further liquor license suspension could go into effect, and she says she plans to consult with her attorney on how to proceed.

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