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The Kentucky Office of Alcoholic Beverage Control is an agency of the government of the U.S. state of Kentucky, within the state's Department of Public Protection and Environmental and Public Protection Cabinet. The department was created by the Kentucky General Assembly in 1944 by KRS 241.015 and 241.030.
Finally, KRS 242.125 allows individual precincts in a city or county to vote dry in a wet city or county, and also allows dry precincts within an otherwise wet city or county to vote wet. An example of this law was in September 2007, when four precincts in Louisville's west end voted to end liquor sales as a deterrent to crime in the area.
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 ...
Can Kentucky residents receive alcohol in the mail? Alcohol producers outside of Kentucky must have a valid Kentucy DTC license to be able to send products to the commonwealth, Voskuhl said.
Kentucky Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control has initiated administrative proceedings to revoke or suspend the licenses for Doc Crow’s Southern Smokehouse & Raw Bar, 127 W. Main St. in ...
ABV > 16% beer and ABV > 16% wine are only available through state liquor stores (most of which are integrated within grocery and beverage stores [139]). A 2008 bill allows the sale of beer in grocery and convenience stores up to ABV 16%. Virginia No Yes 6 a.m. – 2 a.m. No restrictions at any time for club licensees.
However, Kentucky's Office of Alcoholic Beverage Control does not use the term "moist county" to describe a county in which such sales are allowed, but instead calls it a "limited" county. [ 2 ] Officially, a "moist county" is an otherwise-dry county in which a city in the county's jurisdiction has voted to allow full retail sales of alcoholic ...
For example, supermarkets in Finland were allowed to sell only fermented beverages with an alcohol content up to 4.7% ABV, but Alko, the government monopoly, is allowed to sell wine and spirits. The alcohol law in Finland was changed in 2018, allowing grocery stores to sell beverages with an alcohol content up to 5.5% ABV.