Originally Posted by
jerrywall
Several things to address here. One is staffing capacity. Many liquor stores are family run businesses (I'd say most of them - Obviously the dozen or so larger ones aren't). So you're looking at the owner working longer and longer hours, or needing to find reliable people to help cover the expanded capacity for reasonable pay. This can be tricky. When we had a liquor store is was basically a be there 7 am to 9pm, 7 days a week proposition for us. We finally got where we could have an evening manager but it was always tricky finding and maintaining good evening staff. This is also the time period you're most likely to get robbed or have other incidents.
Two is stores working out how many hours are justified. The same reason car lots aren't eager to expand to 7 days a week sales, and that when I had my hobby collectible shops we adjusted hours till we found the right balance. For many businesses, there's a certain amount of money to be made on a daily and weekly basis. More hours doesn't always increase this. It's sort of a bell curve. The more specialized the industry, of course the more it's true. In my hobby shop, I found that 7 days a week, 12 hours day made me no more total sales that 5 or 6 days a week (closing Sundays and for a while Mondays), and having 10 hour days. So the extra hours were just added expenses in security, electricity, and staffing, or my own personal time. Stores will make their decisions based on their locations and demands. I've been to plenty of large cities where there is even 24 hours liquor sales allowed, and the boutique shops, especially in certain areas, had much more limited hours that the places, say in a downtown area, that were open 24 hours.
Related to this, and someone elses comments about the retailers arguing against the fairness of the expanded hours to large retailers. One, the RLAO while loudest, represents a small minority of liquor stores. I'm not sure they even have 10% of liquor stores in Oklahoma as members. Maybe not even 5%. The stores don't have a monolithic mindset. Most owners don't have the time for that. Two, I think the majority of the stores would have been happier with Sunday sales and sales on certain holidays (Memorial, Labor Day, etc) than longer hours in a single day.
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