State Liquor Agency is out, Ohio Liquor is in. The latest step in the evolution of Ohio’s Division of Liquor Control is a rebranding of the business, so to speak. Starting in 2019, the new Ohio Liquor name and logo will be appearing at shops around the state.
Joseph Mollica, former owner of the One Mile West restaurant in Sunapee and since 2011 chairman of the New Hampshire Liquor Commission, has been honored as a 2018 Market Watch Retail Leader by Market Watch magazine.
The City of Philadelphia has launched a new website where people receiving Medicaid benefits can find information about their behavioral health and addiction treatment coverage.
Becky Sturdevant was in her Kalispell home preparing a surprise 30th birthday party for her son, Evan Schneider, when she received a call that he was killed in a head-on collision with a drunk driver.
AUGUSTA, MAINE - An assistant attorney general and a longtime member of Maine's former alcohol enforcement bureau will join the state's new commission on marijuana.
GRANTS PASS, Ore. – Earlier this week, we told you how many Oregon brewers were standing behind a new act making its way through the State Senate.
Wednesday, local brewery owners and activists got together to show their support for “The Oregon Wildlands Act.”SALT LAKE CITY — It was on this day in 1933 that Utah cast the deciding vote to repeal alcohol prohibition in America. Headlines across the country blared that Utah was the vote that approved prohibition repeal under the 21st Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Recreational marijuana becomes legal in Michigan Thursday. Some law enforcement officers worry this will mean more people will drive drug-impaired.
Charleston, W.Va. – Underage drinking impacts youth and families across West Virginia. Approximately 9.3 million youth in the United States ages 12-20 (24.3% of this age group) reported drinking alcohol during the past 30 days (SAMSHA 2013).
The Michigan Senate this week approved legislation from state Senator John Proos to give a tax break to micro-distillers. Senate Bill 579 would reduce the state’s overall liquor markup by 2% over a period of four years, eventually reaching 63%, but only if in the previous year the total state sales of spirits increased by at least 2%.