Minnesota voters opened up the taps in several small towns, where it's newly legal for bars to open on Sundays.
Sunday sales are a fraught topic in Minnesota. Most communities do allow bars and restaurants to pour patrons a drink any day of the week, but it's still illegal for liquor stores to open their doors. Only some communities extend the ban to bars as well — and that number is even smaller after this past election.
More than half a dozen small towns have voted to do away with Sunday sales prohibitions. One of them was the west-central community of Maynard, home to 350 people and one bar: Moldy's.
The Sunday ban has been on the books "forever," said bar owner Darrell Molden, and many Maynard residents saw no reason to change the tradition. Proposals to lift the ban had been on the ballot in two of the past four elections, and twice the voters struck them down.
The third time was a charm for Molden, who might not want to open every Sunday, but wanted "the option to be open on football days, and NASCAR and special events."
So this year, Molden decided to get out the vote for Sunday sales.
"I kind of went after it a little more; advertised," Molden said. "I'm trying to keep up with the other towns around here, that's all."
On Nov. 4, the measure passed by an 18-vote margin, 87 to 69.