The wholesale aspect was discussed frequently before the vote and was one of the positives often mentioned.
The wholesale aspect was discussed frequently before the vote and was one of the positives often mentioned.
Literally everyone involved in the business said hey here’s exactly what’s going to happen. They’ll go 3 tier and it’s going to put a lot of local businesses out to pasture. I remember specifically saying Oklahoma’s system had an accidental stroke of brilliance in keeping a lot of the sales local throughout the supply chain.
Oh well. At least you guys can buy your $4 bottle of chemicals they call wine at wal mart.
Thats quite a dissertation you wrote, so instead of responding to all of it, I’ve got just a couple of questions...
The public very much wanted wine and strong beer in grocery stores and that’s what the vote was about. It was the perfect opportunity to sneak the distribution part through without the public noticing...
Show me where the public was aware that they were voting on two national company’s splitting up all major spirit and wine brands and giving them monopolies over those brands... It’s ridiculous to think it would have ever passed based on its own merits... what have the effects on spirits to the consumer been?
How is giving a monopoly on popular liquor brands good for anyone but the one with the monopoly? What’s happened to spirit prices and availability since the new laws went in to effect...
You’re obviously very knowledgeable on the subject so explain to everyone how the new laws benefited them and were good for consumers and liquor stores in any way...
I look forward to ripping your answers to shreads so give it your best shot...
Seems they both ponied up $$$ to Stephanie Bice (who's now trying to go to D.C.). You think those donations might have been made to get that favorable language in the bill? Why else would they be giving her money?
Then both wholesalers went out and sold huge stakes in their businesses to two of the largest distributors in the US.
Shouldn't be too difficult to see what happened here.... it's called a ruse.
Tomorrow I can finally go into the liquor store with the kid, it'll be nice to not have to take him home and wait for the wife to get home before I can go.
This was one of those no brainer changes. I know back when we had a shop and the retail association was just getting going, accompanied minors and holiday sales were two of the main talking points we cared about (that and in store tastings - although not as important).
Sorry if I missed it but does OKC or OK county have Sunday liquor sales?
Tulsa will be voting on it in March(too lazy to look up the article rn but it’s from Tulsa world).
^^^ Thank you for the update. Just a coupe days ago I was complaining about CA laws! I was told by the liquor store owner next year a limited trial will be had to let stores sell liquor until 4am and possible 24 hour sales after a 4-5 year run. Not sure how true that is and I haven’t looked into it. One thing I love about Nevada is 24 hour liquor sales. Speaking about backwards liquor laws I didn’t realize how restrictive Colorado is.
I hope Oklahoma goes 24 hours and hard liquor anywhere similar to Nevada. Wonder when that happens LOL
Honestly, liquor store owners and their employees would rather not have to work on Sundays as long as no one else is open and they can get away with it but the way the new laws are written, it’s county option and just a matter of time for most counties...
As far as 24 hrs? I would agree with you in most cases but In reality, alcohol is a very strong drug and the demons tend to come out at night...
Chances of something bad happening selling to someone in the wee hours of the morning are a lot different in Oklahoma City than they are in Las Vegas
Lol if you’re really clamoring for 4am liquor runs I think you have other issues
^^^ probably but what difference does that make to you? With your logic you could say that about any time of the day and tell someone they should have planned ahead.
Apart from any personal issues I am dealing with which is none of your concern, I am also for personal liberties and I don’t agree with the government telling you what times of day you can or can’t buy something.
What other states allows liquor stores to be open all the time?
List of alcohol laws of the United States
Some are pretty loose.
I thought Colorado modernized around the time Oklahoma did? Last time I was there I bought some beer at a gas station and it was full strength. They used to have laws that were almost identical to Oklahoma's old laws except they never had the cold beer ban at liquor stores and they never had the 9PM closing time. Looks like Utah also finally ditched 3.2 beer as of November 1st and they were the last state to still have it.
Well for one I drive. I can easily see the possibility increasing of someone that just has to buy a bottle in the wee hours of the morning could be doing so because they’re just really ticked off at someone or something and they’re going to suck down a pint or ? in the parking lot and then drive home. I’m not big on government regulation either but sometimes they have relatively good points.
So even if liquor stores were allowed to be open 24 hours, I don't see the majority of them switching to that. It would likely be the Byron's and Pancho's out there that go to 24 hours. Most of the neighborhood liquor stores especially in the suburban and rural towns will probably limit their hours. I know I've talked to quite a few stores about it. both more recently, and back when we had a shop. Staying open extra late most of the time isn't worth it. The last hour of the store sees a little rush as people try to get in, but overall it gets pretty quiet most nights. Extending it an hour makes sense for those shops on certain nights, but going all the way to midnight, or later, is just wasted labor and more chances for robberies (both times we got robbed, it was after dark). When you get into the very rural areas, there's no justification or sense for pretty much any store to open 24 hours. Now, on New Years Eve we would have made a killing being open until midnight, so that's one of those times we'd have stayed opened if we could. So, people concerned about some massive inflow of late night liquor are probably over reacting, since it won't be as common.
One downside, which is more just an adjustment thing than anything... right now someone can head to pretty much any liquor store, and know when they'll open, and when they'll close. No need to check their hours ahead of time. If a switch like this happens, people will have to get into the habit of looking up WHICH liquor stores are open when, so there will be some learning curves. But nothing drastic.
Seems like there would be several hole in the wall liquor stores in more densely populated places that would be 24 hours.
I could see having some, but again, you have to pay an employee hourly.. and probably security, so you're looking at labor costs of at least $20-30 an hour, plus other operating costs. How many of those hours would have no customers? So it's not going to be as common as folks think. OKC and Tulsa aren't really 24 hour towns yet, and something as specialized as liquor makes it even less common. Most liquor stores operate with very slim profits as it is so they'd definitely have to make money overnight to justify it.
You're more likely to see 24 hour availability become common if they allow gas stations to sell full liquor one day.
There are legitimate reasons people might want to buy liquor at 4 AM - somebody just getting off work and wanting to pick up a bottle of vodka on the way home (just like regular people that get off work at 5 PM do), somebody having an all-night party and running out of liquor, there's a whole bunch of things that happen when most of us are asleep. But I agree that they'd be pretty infrequent purchases and the cost of staying open 24 hours would probably far outweigh the sales.
Oklahoma is not very backwards on this lack of 24 hour liquor sales. There is only 1 (maybe 2) states with 24 hour sales. Heck, the number of states with sales past 2am is maybe 1 or 2 hands, tops.
I do think Oklahoma should go to Sunday liquor store sales, though. Leaving it up to the county is stupid.
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