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Tennessee: Wine in grocery stores likely killed for the year by House committee

March 12, 2013

  

Legislation that would have allowed grocery stores to sell wine appears to be dead for the year after another close vote in a legislative committee.

 

The House Local Government Committee voted 8-7 to reject House Bill 610, in a series vote that defied the wishes of leadership.

 

House Speaker Beth Harwell, R-Nashville, who supports the bill, attended the meeting. Opponents were able to force a vote after winning a delay in the Senate earlier in the day.

 

Opponents of a bill to let grocery stores sell wine won a delay on Tuesday, when a Senate committee put off a vote to discuss new rules for liquor stores.

 

The measure's sponsor, state Sen. Bill Ketron asked to appoint a subcommittee that will meet with grocery store and liquor representatives to try to hammer out a compromise. The subcommittee could present its report as soon as next week.

 

The delay came after members of the Senate Finance Committee spent more than an hour discussing liquor regulations. An opponent of the bill, state Sen. Mark Norris, R-Memphis, presented several amendments to Senate Bill 837. Those changes include letting liquor store operators own more than one location, allowing liquor stores to sell items other than alcohol and lifting restrictions on deals they can cut with wholesalers.

 

The committee accepted most of Norris' suggestions, but the gradual accumulation of changes appeared to rob the bill of its momentum, prompting Ketron to ask the committee to wait.

 

Jarron Springer, president of the Tennessee Grocers and Convenience Store Association, cast the delay as a positive development. He said his side always has believed it would have to compromise with the liquor industry before wine-in-grocery stores legislation clears the General Assembly.

 

"It's the kind of conversation that's needed to happen," he said. "There's no surprises here today. This is exactly what needed to happen."

 
Link:http://www.tennessean.com/article/20130312/NEWS02/303120058/Wine-grocery-stores-likely-killed-year-by-House-committee- 
  

Source: The Tennessean

Great Britain has a drinking problem; U.S. shouldn't import it

March 10, 2013

 

The movie "Field of Dreams" produced a notion that has embedded itself firmly in the American psyche:

 

"If you build it, they will come."

 

Research has consistently shown that is the case with facilities that sell alcoholic beverages. The more stores there are, the more alcohol that is sold - with its attendant increase in drunken driving, underage consumption, addiction and crime.

 

But a national deregulation movement that some say has been promulgated by the alcohol industry has taken hold in some states and is being pushed in others.

 

Deregulation may make sense in fields like energy, because the resulting competition leads to lower prices. But lower alcohol prices will spawn more alcohol consumption. Is that really what we want?

 

Good grief, we could end up like Britain, according to Pamela S. Erickson, a national leader in the fight against excess access to alcohol.

 

The United Kingdom is an example of what can happen in a totally deregulated environment, she said.

 

"Today alcohol is available in bars, clubs and grocery stores 24 hours a day, seven days a week," Erickson said. "They have little regulation, poor enforcement and lots of cheap alcohol. They also have an alcohol epidemic on their hands."

 

Four large grocery chains control 75 percent of the market, Erickson said. Most use alcohol as a loss leader, as they engage in price wars.

 

"Drinking at home has increased," she said.

 

And there has been a large increase in public disorder crimes around bars - vomiting, urination, fights and vandalism.

 

"England has a drinking problem," wrote Tim Heffernan in the November-December issue of Washington Monthly.

 

"Since 1990, teenage alcohol consumption has doubled. Since World War II, alcohol intake for the population as a whole has doubled, with a third of that increase occurring since just 1995. The United Kingdom has very high rates of binge and heavy drinking, with the average Brit consuming the equivalent of nearly 10 liters of pure ethanol per year," Heffernan wrote.

 

The United States is in comparatively better shape.

 

"A third of the country does not drink, and teenage drinking is at a historic low," Heffernan wrote. "The rate of alcohol use among seniors in high school has fallen 25 percentage points since 1980. Glassing is something that happens in movies, not at the corner bar.

 

"Why has the United States, so similar to Great Britain in everything from language to pop culture trends, managed to avoid the huge spike of alcohol abuse that has gripped the UK? The reasons are many, but one stands out above all: the market in Great Britain is rigged to foster excessive alcohol consumption in ways it is not in the United States - at least not yet."

 

To read more, click this link:  http://www.thereporteronline.com/article/20130311/OPINION03/130319905/great-britain-has-a-drinking-problem-u-s-shouldn-t-import-it 

 

Source: The Reporter

Washington: Privatization of liquor industry hurting small Washington liquor stores

March 10, 2013

  

Bonnie Roulstone's business thrived when the state controlled the liquor business, and is fighting to survive now that it's out.

 

She's watched sales at her Clearview Spirits and Wine store plummet as competitors proliferate and new rules wrought by the voter-ordered privatization of the booze industry take root.

 

"It's very questionable if I can keep going," she said of the three-year-old store that operated under contract with the state before the change. "I would have had to (close) if I didn't have other resources."

 

She expected the cash register to ring less often when the state stopped selling hard liquor last June, just not this much less.

 

"There's more competition. That's what this was all about. I understand," she said. "Coming out of the gate I knew I would lose 30 percent of my walk-in customers who can go get their liquor at the grocery store. I planned for that."

 

What she, owners of other contract stores like her and buyers of state-owned stores through auction didn't expect is a requirement that they charge a 17 percent fee on sales to bars and restaurants.

 

That rule cost her significant business as restaurateurs switched to buy from distributors who are not required by the law to impose the fee. Now she's joined an alliance of small and large retailers, including Costco, to get lawmakers to erase the fee.

 

"I feel I can compete with anyone if I have a level playing field," she said. "Right now the field is not level."

 

She felt confident enough in the months after Initiative 1183 passed in November 2011 to set about opening a second store in Monroe. It is larger and she stocks a greater number and variety of craft distilled spirits, handcrafted beers and wines.

 

She knows it is a risky venture but she's looking for privatization to pay dividends in much the way a state-run system did before.

 

"I hope that the niche we're going after will be successful," she said. "I think it's going to come down to a few specialty stores and a lot of big-box retailers. I hope that we will be in the business."

 
To read more, click this link: http://www.columbian.com/news/2013/mar/10/small-wash-liquor-stores-hurting/
 
Source: The Columbian 

Utah: Senate moves to beef up fines for underage drinking in Utah

March 11, 2013

 

The Senate moved Monday toward beefing up fines for selling alcohol to underage drinkers, along with numerous other tweaks to liquor laws.

 

It voted 24-1 to pass SB261, and sent it to the House.

 

Its sponsor, Sen. John Valentine, R-Orem, said the state has found that undercover youth who attempt to buy alcohol in Utah bars and restaurants are successful about 30 percent of the time.

 

"This is a failure of the system," he said. "We have to make sure our restaurants get the message. I think they will get the message very quickly" with the bill.

 

It sets the mandatory minimum fine for selling alcohol to a minor at $2,500 for a first offense; $5,000 and a five-day suspension for the second; and $15,000 and a 14-day suspension for a third offense in an 18-month period.

 

Valentine said his bill tries to seek a balance between several recent moves to improve hospitality and the need to ensure that does not increase underage or other illegal use of alcohol.

 

It would also make several other tweaks to liquor laws, including:

 

  • Adds an attorney to the Attorney General's Office to prosecute alcohol violations.
  • Allows small cities to permit a new bar on the location of an old one without waiting three years.
  • Permits liquor and beer "flights," tastings of multiple drinks, often with a theme. They were already allowed for wine.
 

Source: Salt Lake Tribune

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