District Of Columbia 2023-2024 Regular Session

District Of Columbia Council Bill PR25-1072 Compare Versions

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11 ______________________________ 1
22 Councilmember Christina Henderson 2
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88 A PROPOSED RESOLUTION 8
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1414 IN THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 14
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1919 To declare the existence of an emergency with respect to the need to amend, on an emergency 19
2020 basis, the District of Columbia Official Code to allow retail establishments with a valid 20
2121 on-premises Class C or Class D retailer license to refuse cash as a form of payment. 21
2222 RESOLVED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, That this 22
2323 resolution may be cited as the “Entertainment Establishment Employee Safety Emergency 23
2424 Declaration Resolution of 2024”. 24
2525 Sec. 2. (a) The Cashless Retailers Prohibition Act, passed in 2020 and funded in 2023, 25
2626 prohibited retail establishments from refusing cash as a form of payment. However, due to public 26
2727 safety concerns, a provision was included in the Secure DC Omnibus Amendment Act of 2024, 27
2828 to temporarily pause this law. This pause is set to expire on January 1, 2025, at which the 28
2929 cashless retailer prohibition will go into effect. A permanent version of this emergency measure 29
3030 was introduced on September 16, 2024, and is pending in the Committee of the Whole. 30
3131 (b) Many businesses, particularly those that sell alcohol, are concerned for their 31
3232 employees’ safety and have shared multiple stories with the Council about successful and 32
3333 attempted robberies and burglaries of their establishments due to the presence of cash on 33
3434 premises and the need to transport large amounts of cash off the premises. Businesses that are 34 cashless are not at risk of robbery in the same way businesses with cash on hand are. The 35
3535 primary reason establishments choose to avoid cash payments is to reduce the risk of robbery 36
3636 and burglary, followed by the availability of non-cash payment options and reducing the risk of 37
3737 internal theft. 38
3838 (c) Consumer use of contactless payment options has surged dramatically since the initial 39
3939 introduction of the Cashless Retailers Prohibition Act of 2018. In 2018, there were 2.9 billion 40
4040 contactless transactions in the United States; by 2023, that number had increased more than 41
4141 sixfold, reaching 17.9 billion. The Federal Reserve's 2023 Diary of Consumer Payment Choice 42
4242 revealed that cash use had dropped to a near-record low in 2023, with consumers using cash 75% 43
4343 less frequently than credit and debit cards. Additionally, cash was the least common payment 44
4444 method for services at restaurants and bars in 2023. In recognition of the changes in consumer 45
4545 use of payment forms post-pandemic, and to strike a balance between the need for unbanked 46
4646 individuals to rely on cash as a form of payment to obtain necessary goods and services with the 47
4747 safety concerns of particularly vulnerable businesses, this emergency measure would exempt 48
4848 Class C or Class D alcohol license holders from the requirement to accept cash as payment. 49
4949 Sec. 3. This resolution shall take effect immediately. 50