[RP TownTalk] (no subject)
Laureys, Ken R.
KRLaureys at co.pg.md.us
Mon Oct 17 20:45:21 UTC 2005
David -- Actually, beer & wine is sold in the Glenridge Giant (at intersection of 410 & 450). However, I believe they were grandfathered in when the county modified it liquor laws (before I arrived here in 1987). Each county controls those decisions, and Montgomery County for example, opted to use special "County Liquor Stores" for hard liquors.
You can contact the 'Liquor Board, which is a state-county appointed board(see following):
Board of License Commissioners (Alcohol)
5012 Rhode Island Ave
Hyattsville, MD 20781
Ken Laureys
-----Original Message-----
From: TownTalk-bounces at riverdale-park.org
[mailto:TownTalk-bounces at riverdale-park.org]On Behalf Of David Hiles
Sent: Sunday, October 16, 2005 12:13 PM
To: TownTalk at riverdale-park.org
Subject: [RP TownTalk] (no subject)
dear fellow citizens,
for me, this is a quality of life issue. i'd like to see our town
gov't help improve this aspect of life in our area. telling me to go
elsewhere and stop whining misses the point. or maybe sends me and
other high income citizens another message...
in many places in the USA, you can routinely buy beer and wine at the
grocery. in my experience this includes, charlottesville, charleston,
alexandria, san diego, eugene, austin, etc. all cool places in my
view.
buying a box of wine at the grocery store is more convenient than
having to go to a liquor store. convenience is good. i'm pretty busy
and i've always found it irritating to have to go out of my way to buy
my malt liquor. irritation and malt liquor, not a good combination...
anyway, why it is better for our quality of life to have lots of liquor
stores? do we have this strange arrangement because of effective
special interest lobbying? "but dumms's corner and franklin's might
lose some beer and wine sales." so what? they shouldn't get special
protection in the law. we would have more bread stores if there was a
law against sellling bread at the grocery. in jurisdictions where beer
and wine is universally available at grocery stores, you have fewer
liquor stores.
i would like someone to explain to me why profit-seeking groceries in
our area don't routinely sell this staple product. my guess is 1)
delegate justin ross is not a dummy, and 2) that "existing law" makes
it difficult for groceries in our fair county to sell beer/wine, maybe
particularly if there is a liquor store already near by. there may be
something similar at work in montgomery county. i don't care about
the glenridge giant or the coop grocery in greenbelt. i shop at the
giants in riverdale plaza, in beltway plaza, on queen's chapel road,
and across from pg plaza. none of these sell beer or wine. why is this
a good situation and good public policy? bad, outmoded laws can be
fixed.
i know people who have left our area because of poor shopping options.
the trader joe's in the va suburbs do sell wine. the maryland joe's
don't.
re trader joe's: wine is part of the dna of this company. see this
excerpt from their web site.
A SHORT HISTORY - AND FUTURE - OF TRADER JOE'S
Trader Joe's actually began in 1958 as a chain of convenience stores
called "Pronto Markets” in the Los Angeles area. In 1967, the founder,
Joe Coulombe, the original Trader Joe, wanted to expand the stores'
offerings and enhance their image. He doubled the floor space and
offered hard-to-find, boutique domestic and imported wines and gourmet
food items at outstanding prices. He decked out the stores with cedar
plank walls and nautical décor and garbed the Captain (the store
manager), the First Mate (the assistant manager) and the Crew Members
in colorful Hawaiian shirts. "Trader Joe's" was born.
WE are who we have been waiting for.
http://riverdalepark.blogspot.com/
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