liquor licenses

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1 headnote for liquor licenses
4.839 documents for liquor licenses
  • RIVERSIDE -- City Council is opposing the renewal of liquor licenses at five bars, citing the persistent problems their customers have caused for the police department. Council voted to register objections with the Ohio Division of Liquor Control to the licenses of DeJa Brew, 2059 Harsh-man Road; Christy Club, 2623 Valley St.; Zodiac Lounge, 4216 Linden Ave.; KC Lounge, 4766 Airway Road; and the Redd Room, 5540 Airway Road.

  • WHITTIER - If the Planning Commission Monday approves a beer and wine license for the restaurant, Wing Master, it will be the 36th in an area where any more than four would have the area considered overconcentrated by the state. But there are many more thanks to a law passed in the 1990s giving cities the right to allow as many liquor licenses it wants as long as it determines that the business provides a public convenience or necessity.

  • The state moved quickly this week to suspend the liquor licenses of two Southtowns restaurants whose owner was the subject of dozens of police complaints. Those complaints -- including alleged violent assaults by owner Michael J. Sweeney and numerous accounts of underage drinking -- spurred the State Liquor Authority to order a rare emergency suspension of the licenses at both Mia's Restaurant locations, in Orchard Park and Elma.

  • DAYTON -- An Oregon Historic District neighborhood association vote to abolish a cap on liquor licenses will pave the way for growth in the commercial district while also protecting residents who live adjacent to the arts-and-entertainment strip, said Mike Martin, president of the Oregon District Business Association, on Wednesday. The board of trustees of the Oregon Historic District Society voted 5-4 Tuesday night to abolish the cap on liquor licenses originated in the 1980s and known as the "Rule of 17" because it limited the area to having no more than 17 liquor licenses at once.

  • NEWBURGH A family dispute has led to Newburgh Variety losing its license to sell beer, wine and liquor, stripping away some 50 percent of the stores business in the process, according to its new manager. Karen Dormida-Sibley of Newburgh, who has worked at the store for two years, said Monday a dispute between the stores owner, Delmer Terrill, and his daughter Amanda Batchelder is responsible for the 60-year-old stores loss of its licenses to sell alcohol.

  • The Village of Hempstead has an alcohol problem, according to Mayor Wayne Hall. Hempstead is home to 167 establishments that are licensed to sell alcohol - a significant number for a village that is only 3.7 miles in area. Hall said bars, liquor stores and bodegas that sell alcohol have a negative impact on the village's quality of life, and he will be in Manhattan today to push the New York State Liquor Authority to refuse to issue any new liquor licenses at locations with a history of disturbances on files.

  • In the corner of the Lone Pine Golf Club pro shop in Washington County, a few folders rest above a filing cabinet. They contain paperwork for Green Hills Borough, and the small space they occupy represents Mayor Terry George's office. Eighty miles to the northwest sits a tiny town with a big name -- Borough of Slovenska Narodna Podporna Jednota, or SNPJ. Its name stems from the Slovene National Benefit Society, which owns the recreation center that is, essentially, the community.

  • Restaurants in Orchard Park and Elma saw their liquor licenses suspended this week after the owner's brother was arrested on felony assault charges, according to Orchard Park police and State Liquor Authority officials. Police led Chad Sweeney, 33, out of Mia's Restaurant in Orchard Park at about 12:30 p.m. Monday, Orchard Park Police Chief Andrew Benz said.

  • The City Council will hold a public meeting regarding the applications on July 11. By Josh Mitchell

  • EGG HARBOR, Wis. - An analysis of liquor licenses shows one small community in Door County holds the most licenses per capita than any other place in Wisconsin. The Green Bay Press-Gazette analyzed data from the state Department of Revenue and the U.S. Census Bureau and found the village of Egg Harbor has a liquor outlet for every nine residents. That includes everything from restaurants to the golf course to the mini mart. Egg Harbor has 21 licenses and 201 residents.



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