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In the United States, smoker protection laws are state statutes that prevent employers from discriminating against employees for using tobacco products. Currently twenty-nine states and the District of Columbia have such laws. Although laws vary from state to state, employers are generally prohibited from either refusing to hire or firing an ...
A new Ohio bill would require state-approved training for anyone who serves alcohol if it becomes law. The bill would require all liquor permit holders and their employees to complete a training ...
A proposed Ohio law — House Bill 504 — would require state-approved training for all liquor permit holders and their employees. The training would include the laws on alcohol sales, preventing ...
Bars and restaurants stop serving alcohol at 2 a.m., but some hold a special 'cabaret license' that allows them to continue serving alcohol until 4 a.m. [41] 6 a.m. to 12 a.m. Within Honolulu County 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. Within Kauai, Maui, and Hawaii counties Yes 21 21 Exception: Underage consumption allowed for religious purposes [42]
The only official publication of the enactments of the General Assembly is the Laws of Ohio; the Ohio Revised Code is only a reference. [4] A maximum 900 copies of the Laws of Ohio are published and distributed by the Ohio Secretary of State; there are no commercial publications other than a microfiche republication of the printed volumes. [5]
Four grocery chain stores in the county have grandfathered alcohol licenses. [34] The regulatory agency is Montgomery County Alcohol Beverage Services (ABS). Dorchester County was an alcohol control county until 2008, when the County Council voted to permanently close the county-owned liquor dispensaries, with subsequent change in the state law ...
"The type of language that we have in the Ohio Revised Code makes it very difficult for cigar bars to sell any type of alcohol, get a liquor permit, or have other types of tangential elements that ...
The Ohio Division of Liquor Control, part of the Ohio Department of Commerce, controls alcohol manufacturing, distribution and sales within the U.S. state of Ohio. Ohio is an alcoholic beverage control state , thus the state has a monopoly over the wholesaling or retailing of some or all categories of alcoholic beverages.