This is copied and pasted from the official Serving It Right website:
- Minors employed in food-primary establishments, or liquor-primary stadiums who are 16 or older may serve liquor but may not open bottles, pour or mix liquor. You must have adult staff supervising minors serving liquor.
Depends where you are, where you served it and where you are from but not typically because you wouldn't be hired with that on your record anyway.
No, in most states it is illegal for a minor to touch\carry alcohol or tobacco. If you daughter is serving alcohol it is the supervisors fault, not hers.
If a bar serves food as well as alcohol, a minor may be in the bar with a parent or guardian. If it is just a bar that does not serve anything other than alcohol, they cannot be in there at all.
with you all the way
If they do not have legal custody, no. In fact, the custodial parent should take this matter before the court with jurisdiction over the case. They should try to obtain a court order that the child not be served alcohol while in the "other parent''s" custody. Serving alcohol to a minor could constitute child endangerment in some jurisdictions and the parents who does so in liable for any resulting damages. Some states allow parents to serve alcohol to minors at home but in other states it would be a felony. You should consult with an attorney.
Its called "Serving it Right" www.ServingitRight.com
No. It is against regulation for a minor to be in possession of alcoholic beverages and minors can be arrested for serving alcohol if they are caught.
No, in most states it is illegal for a minor to touch\carry alcohol or tobacco. If you daughter is serving alcohol it is the supervisors fault, not hers.
The answer might be freedom. However, in many states adults can legally serve their minor offspring alcohol within the home and, in some states, outside the home. Some states allow a spouse age 21 or older to legally serve the spouse under the age of 21 alcohol. Many states permit serving persons of any age alcohol for religious purposes.
You have to be 21 in order to serve alcohol.
Yes, it is illegal to serve alcohol to a minor in Nebraska. The state's legal drinking age is 21, and individuals who serve alcohol to minors can face penalties including fines and potential jail time.
No. Parents cannot serve liquor to their minor child in public or private.
In most countries, the drinking/serving age is 21.
In the US - no. To sell or serve alcohol you must be of 'legal' age for that state.
You are breaking the law - contributing to the delinquency of a minor - impairing their health and well-being - etc..
Yes, they can, providing they are over 18. Most license holders to serve alcohol, are pub landlords, and as such, have unrelated staff serving for them, so anyone can serve alcohol under someone's licence as long as they are over 18, and are in the premises that are stated within the licence.
It is perfectly legal for a minor to sit in a bar, as long as the minor does not consume alcohol. Bars can serve non-alcoholic drinks too.
The legal responsibility typically falls on the individual or establishment that provided the alcohol to the minor. In some jurisdictions, both the supplier and the minor may face legal consequences for the underage consumption of alcohol.