Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Liquor Licence Act of Ontario (the Act) is a provincial act in Ontario dealing with licensing and possession of alcohol. In most cases, the Act impacts eateries requiring a licence to serve alcohol. The Act's origins lie in the Prohibition period, when alcohol was deemed illegal. The Act was introduced in draft form in 1926 by the ...
From 1916 to 1927, alcohol was banned in the province of Ontario under the Ontario Temperance Act. Established in 1947 under the Liquor Licence Act , which permitted alcohol to be sold and consumed in public taverns for the first time since the First World War , the agency is not to be mistaken with the Liquor Control Board of Ontario , an ...
The Alcohol and Gaming Regulation and Public Protection Act is an act governing the sale of alcohol and gaming regulation on Ontario. The act is responsible for the administration of the Liquor Licence Act, Gaming Control Act, 1992; Wine Content and Labelling Act, 2000; Liquor Control Act (Section 3(1)b, e, f, g and 3(2)a); and
The AGCO was established on February 23, 1998, by the Government of Ontario under the Alcohol and Gaming Regulation and Public Protection Act of 1996. [2] This Act transferred responsibility for the Liquor Licence Act and the Gaming Control Act to the AGCO.
Established in 1947 under the Liquor Licence Act (Ontario), the agency is not to be mistaken with the Liquor Control Board of Ontario (LCBO), an alcohol retailer. The LLBO was replaced by the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario in 1998 under the Alcohol and Gaming Regulation and Public Protection Act (Ontario) passed in 1996.
In October 1919, wartime prohibition was made permanent and guaranteed prohibition until the Liquor Control Act of 1927. [1] The Board of License Commissioners (BLC) was created in 1915 to centralize liquor law authority and precedes the Liquor Control Board of Ontario (LCBO) during the decade of Prohibition prior to LCBO's creation. The BLC ...
The Liquor Control Act, 1927 authorized the LCBO to "control the sale, transportation and delivery" of alcoholic beverages in Ontario. [17] Brewers Retail was created to sell beer in a controlled manner while wines and spirits (as well as beer) were sold in LCBO outlets.
In 1876, the Ontario Legislature passed the Liquor Licence Act. The sale of alcohol was a hotly contested issue at the time, with strong advocates for prohibition (the "drys"), and equally strong advocates for the public sale of alcohol (the "wets"). The act transferred control over alcohol sales from the municipalities to provincially ...