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The New Jersey Smoke-Free Air Act was introduced to the New Jersey Senate on October 14, 2004, by Senator John H. Adler and Senator Thomas H. Kean, Jr. [1] The bill was passed by the New Jersey Senate on December 15, 2005, with a vote of 29 to 7 and by the New Jersey Assembly on January 9, 2006, with a vote of 64 to 12. [1]
Immediately upon the end of Prohibition in 1933, New Jersey instituted the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law, codified as "Title 33 Intoxicating Liquors" of the New Jersey Statutes, [2] which established the state ABC. [3] These laws are expanded through administrative regulations in Title 13, Chapter 2 of the New Jersey Administrative Code. [4]
A restaurant or other business with a retail consumption license may allow consumers to bring their own beer or wine, though many do not. [55] New Jersey law prohibits strip clubs and "sexually oriented business", where stripteases and erotic dances are regularly performed, from offering both full nudity and alcohol sales. [56]
The agency is developing a new grant program to provide funding for small businesses that have obtained an inactive plenary retail consumption liquor license. The program, once finalized, would ...
One of the last "dry towns" in Jersey could finally permit restaurants to sell liquor after 120 years.
Bars, lounges, retail tobacco stores, limousines under private hire, designated hotel/motel smoking rooms, and psychiatric facilities are entirely exempt from the Act's regulation. [9] Local governments may regulate smoking more stringently than the Act, [12] and the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals reiterated this in August 2009. [13]
Those include $300 and $2,000 for selling blunt wraps and flavored tobacco to a minor in 2022, respectively, plus a $2,000 fine for selling flavored tobacco to a minor in 2023.
Ministry of Development (MR) – Central Registration and Information on Business (CEIDG) [70] – company register for natural persons trading as sole traders or their civil law partnerships (searchable); such companies are prohibited from performing certain activities (e.g. operating a life insurance company), and proper agricultural activity ...