COLUMBUS, Ohio -- The Ohio Craft Brewers Association has mounted an effort to change a state law that it says is not only outdated but hampers industry growth.
Proposed legislation, House Bill 1160, would allow taverns, bars, and restaurants with a liquor license to cater an unlimited number of events. Current law grants licensees to cater up to 52 events annually.
If you're 19 or 20, you can sell or serve alcohol in Michigan, and you can work at a medical marijuana facility. Apply to work at a recreational marijuana dispensary, though, and you'll get told to come back when you're 21.
Some Michigan lawmakers and industry groups are hoping to change that.
History will be made on May 20 and 21 with the inaugural Oregon Asian American Pacific Islander (AAPI) Food & Wine Festival. Taking place at Stoller Estate in Dayton, the first-of-its-kind event will feature five AAPI-owned Willamette Valley wineries and 10 AAPI chefs.
Ohioans could vote to legalize recreational marijuana later this year.
But there are still hoops to jump through to get such a proposal on the November ballot.The Alabama House of Representatives hasn't had a whole lot of disagreement so far this session, and when it has, the votes have largely been along party lines.
But a bill to increase the amount of alcohol allowed for curbside pickup bucked that trend Thursday, passing on a narrow 46-30 vote.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- April is Alcohol Awareness Month, which is a time meant to help educate and break through the stigma that surrounds alcoholism.
Alcohol sales shot up during the pandemic, and the Mecklenburg County Alcoholic Beverage Control Board CEO, Keva Walton, says sales remain high.
RALEIGH -- You currently can't buy liquor from ABC stores on Sundays in North Carolina, but a bill working its way through the legislature could change how you plan for your weekend alcohol consumption.
BURLINGTON, Vt. (WCAX) - In Vermont, customers can buy a cocktail with their takeout order at a restaurant, for now.
ROCKFORD, Mich. -- If you plan on driving for your spring break getaway this year, it may provide the time you need to explain the dangers of drugs and alcohol to your children.
The Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) unveiled Talk Sooner -- its youth drug prevention campaign -- in Rockford Tuesday. It's a resource encouraging Michigan parents to "make the chatter matter" while taking the family on road trips.