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The sale and distribution of beverage alcohol in Alberta had been conducted privately, under licence until 1916 when, during the height of Canada's Prohibition during the First World War, the Liberal government called a referendum in which Albertans voted in favour of the Liquor Act, which closed private liquor stores and the sale of alcohol beverage other than weak beer in privately owned bars.
As of December 2022, the Alberta Gaming and Liquor Commission listed 42 licensed Real Canadian Liquorstore locations. [1] After the province began to issue more private liquor licenses, Loblaw opened the chain's first Saskatchewan location as a store within a store at a Superstore in Yorkton in October 2018. The following month, Loblaw ...
The 1915 Alberta liquor plebiscite was the first plebiscite to ask voters in Alberta whether the province should implement prohibition by ratifying the proposed Liquor Act. The plebiscite was the culmination of years of lobbying by the province's temperance movements and agricultural groups, and was proposed through the recently implemented ...
Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis Commission (AGLC) Corporate Enterprise Conducts and manages provincial lotteries, controls the manufacture, import, sale, purchase, possession, storage, transportation, use, and consumption of liquor and cannabis. Service Alberta and Red Tape Reduction: Alberta Motor Vehicle Industry Council (AMVIC)
Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries (MBLL), a corporation owned by the government, was told to stop ordering alcoholic products from the U.S. and pull American products off the shelves of liquor stores ...
Regulated liquor stores (both private and government-operated) can sell off-premises alcohol from 9:00 a.m. until 11:00 p.m., with government-operated liquor stores typically closing before 9 p.m. [3] Alberta: Last call and sale of alcohol from a store or establishment is 2 a.m. province-wide.
in government-owned BC Liquor Stores, in rural government-appointed liquor agencies (which may be a gas station or convenience store). There are also VQA (Vintners Quality Alliance) wine stores, which are privately owned. They sell only British Columbia wines that have the VQA designation, at the same price as in the government liquor stores.
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