Montgomery County Alcohol Beverage Services Explained

Agency Name:Montgomery County Alcohol Beverage Services
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Superseding:Montgomery County Liquor Dispensary
Jurisdiction:Montgomery County, Maryland
Headquarters:201 Edison Park Drive, Gaithersburg, Maryland 20878, U.S.
Coordinates:39.1131°N -77.2329°W
Employees:442[1]
Budget:$264million (2021)
Chief1 Name:Kathie Durbin[2]
Chief1 Position:Director
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Alcohol Beverage Services, previously known as the Department of Liquor Control is a government agency within the County of Montgomery, Maryland, and is the wholesaler of beer, wine and spirits alcoholic beverage throughout the county's 507sqmi area. Montgomery County Department of Liquor Control also exercises control over retail sales for off-premises consumption, either through government-operated package stores or designated agents.

Alcohol Beverage Services (ABS) distributes beer, wine and spirits to approximately 1,100 licensed businesses and sells alcohol to go through its 25 owned and operated retail stores[3] throughout the county. ABS is the only authorized seller of spirits for off-premises consumption in the county. Revenue generated from the sale of alcohol, about 30-35 million dollars annually, is deposited in the Montgomery County General Fund for the county to use on projects and services. The Public Health community, including the CDC, has identified the control model as a public safety initiative because it limits alcohol outlet density and associated issues.

For the fiscal year ended June 30, 2021, Montgomery County recognized $304million of revenue from alcohol, and it incurred $264million of operating expenses from alcohol, resulting in a net gain of $40million.[4]

History

Between 1880 and 1933, sale of alcohol was prohibited within Montgomery County.[5] A 1933 law ended that, but it also allowed only three restaurants in the county to serve alcohol by the drink.[6]

Montgomery County Liquor Dispensary, a state-run agency, used to control liquor sales in the county.[7] Stores selling beer were only allowed to buy beer from the Montgomery County Liquor Dispensary, not from beer wholesalers.[7] On February 1, 1951, Montgomery County's representatives in the Maryland General Assembly introduced a law to change the agency from a state-run agency to a county-run agency.[7] The law passed and was effective July 1 1951.[8]

The Montgomery County Department of Liquor Control was officially established on July 1, 1951. Montgomery County's Liquor Control Board was created under the terms of Section 159 of Article 2B of the Annotated Code of Maryland. The Board of License Commissioners, which had been created on December 5, 1933, became a completely separate entity. The Board is responsible for licensing and regulation of liquor, a responsibility which they share with the county police department.

A Maryland law passed in 1978 prohibited chain and discount stores from having alcohol licenses. The same law said that only a Maryland resident could have an alcohol license and that each person could only have one alcohol license.[9] [10] The chain-store law was enacted in the early 1980s after a push from small, local retail businesses. A grandfather clause to the law allowed four grocery chains, namely Giant Food, Safeway, Shoppers Food & Pharmacy, and Magruder's, were each allowed to have an alcohol license for exactly one location in Montgomery County. 7-Eleven was allowed one alcohol license, which was located Aspen Hill.[10] An alcohol license was able to be transferred to any of the chain's other locations in Montgomery County, subject to approval by the county Board of License Commissioners.[10] The 7-Eleven license was challenged in 2017 by small business retailers and eventually revoked in 2018 for violating the chain-store restriction. The chain store law is independent of ABS. In fact, the majority of control jurisdictions have alcohol sales in chain stores. The state law changed since then, and grocery stores and other stores are now allowed to have licenses to sell beer and wine.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Montgomery County, Maryland Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, for the Year ending June 30, 2021 . December 17, 2021 . Montgomery County, Maryland . https://web.archive.org/web/20220308085801/http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/Finance/Resources/Files/data/financial/cafr/FY2021_ACFR.pdf . March 8, 2022 .
  2. "Durbin Becomes First Woman to Lead Department of Alcohol Beverage Services". Montgomery Community Media. May 4, 2021.
  3. http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/Apps/DLC/Retail/store_locations.cfm County of Montgomery Department of Liquor Control Retail Store Directory.
  4. "Annual Comprehensive Financial Report". Montgomery County Government. June 30, 2021.
  5. McMaster, Richard K.; Hiebert, Ray Eldon. A Grateful Remembrance: The Story of Montgomery County, Maryland. Montgomery County Government and the Montgomery County Historical Society. 1976. p. 197.
  6. News: . Kendrick . Thomas R. . Sen. Gude Goes Pubbing To Check Liquor Laws: Action on Bottle Clubs Unlicensed Activity 1962 Profits Soar . The Washington Post . 1 January 1963 . B1 .
  7. News: . Farquhar . Roger B. . Liquor Control Shift Asked by Montgomery . The Washington Post . 1 February 1951 . B1 .
  8. News: . Senate Favors Montgomery Liquor Board . The Washington Post . 22 February 1951 . B1 .
  9. News: . McIntyre . Dave . Md. consumers can't buy alcohol at grocery stores. That may change soon . The Washington Post . 7 October 2020 . E.7 .
  10. Tousignant, Kristi (January 25, 2012).Web site: Briggs Chaney Will Lose Beer and Wine Sales at Grocery . https://web.archive.org/web/20150402220524/http://www.gazette.net/article/20120125/NEWS/701259582%26template%3Dgazette . dead . April 2, 2015 . The Gazette (Maryland).