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Porterville downtown committee details entertainment zone rules as spring events calendar is finalized
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Summary
The Porterville Downtown Committee reviewed a city events calendar and outlined rules for a newly approved entertainment zone — including day permits, wristbands and confined street alcohol service — as organizers prepare applications for a proposed car show.
The Porterville Downtown Committee on an early spring meeting walked through a new events calendar and explained how the city—ntertainment zone will work during planned downtown gatherings.
Chair (Speaker 2) said the entertainment zone, which the City Council has approved, designates a block for event activities during which beer and wine may be carried outside establishments if organizers meet insurance, security and licensing requirements. "We will be able to work with the downtown businesses that are within the event area to actually have alcohol, beer, and wine that can be carried outside of the establishment and on the street during the event only," the chair said.
The committee and staff described operational details attendees should expect: event organizers must apply for a community-event permit, businesses that sell alcohol will need appropriate day permits and ABC compliance, wristbands will verify age, plastic cups must be used, and security and insurance will be required. Staff said the council or event organizer will set precise boundaries for each event, typically between Olive and Morton on Main Street, and that the first event expected to use the zone may be a downtown car show.
Merchants debated wristband logistics and fees. A business owner noted concern that attendees might assume a wristband equates to free drinks; the chair and staff said the $10 wristband fee (the council discussed a $10 guideline) is intended to offset extra administrative or security costs and that organizers typically administer and sell wristbands. "The wristband says that you're 21 and you're able to participate in the event," the chair said, adding that businesses would remain responsible for individual licensing rules.
Staff also highlighted a city events calendar on the municipal website and said entries are posted when organizers submit paperwork; staff encouraged groups to file applications so events can be included in the master calendar. Committee members urged broader outreach to include the Chamber of Commerce and other community groups, but staff said the committee ims to create space rather than favor a particular organization.
The committee did not take any formal final action on specific event applications; staff said organizers must file applications with the city for council consideration and that the first formal approvals will likely come through the City Council at upcoming meetings.

