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Liquor Control Committee Will Make Changes to Privatization Plan, Chairman Promises

Pennsylvania State Rep. John Taylor, R-Philadelphia, holds the key to the future of the liquor privatization plan.

 

By Eric Boehm | PA Independent

HARRISBURG – The Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board had what some hope is its last budget hearing in the state House on Tuesday morning.

House Majority Leader Mike Turzai, R-Allegheny, announced last week that he will be introducing a plan to allow wine and beer to be sold in grocery stores and elsewhere (full details here), but before you start popping those corks over the news that the state-run liquor monopoly is headed for the trash heap, remember the bill has to actually make it through the General Assembly.

And even though both the state House and state Senate are controlled by Republicans, it’s no slam dunk.

The first major hurdle after the bill gets introduced on March 4 will be the House Liquor Control CommitteeRecent attempts to privatize the liquor stores have stumbled there, in part because the committee’s chairman, state Rep. John Taylor, the lone Republican member of the General Assembly from Philadelphia, has not been on the same page with Turzai and Corbett.

Following the budget hearing Tuesday, Taylor said he “might be a cosponsor of (Turzai’s) bill, but you can bet we’re going to change parts of it.”

Specifically, Taylor said he wants to examine the timetable, including which parts of the multi-level privatization plan would go into effect immediately and which might have to wait a few years.  He said his goal is to avoid the chaotic process some other states have fallen victim to when they did away with similar liquor monopolies.

“It seems like we’re going to agree on most of it, but the speed of what we’re doing is really a big part of it,” Taylor said.

But Pennsylvanians have been dealing with the PLCB for some 80 years since the end of Prohibition, so what’s another couple of years in the grand scheme of things, right?

For what it’s worth, Turzai’s office confirms they are on the same track with Taylor and open to some changes to the bill.

And lawmakers aiming to kill the PLCB and privatize the state liquor stores this year were surely heartened to hear new PLCB Chairman Joseph Brion say he supports privatization from a philosophical point of view – though he made it clear that as long as the state is in the business of selling liquor, he believes it should do so in the most efficient and effective way possible.

Boehm can be reached at Eric@PAIndependent.com and follow @PAIndependent on Twitter for more.

About this column: Pennsylvania Independent is a public interest journalism project dedicated to promoting open, transparent, and accountable state government by reporting on the activities of agencies, bureaucracies, and politicians in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Related Topics: pa independent

Albert Brooks

3:51 pm on Friday, March 1, 2013

After 80 years please grow a spine and just get it done!

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Liberty 1

4:02 pm on Saturday, March 2, 2013

Taylor - a republican in Philadelphia??? He's a democrat in the pocket of the union. Actions speak louder then labels.

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Ed

11:16 am on Tuesday, March 5, 2013

I'm still not seeing answers to these questions:

How will the Governor fund the unemployment of 5,000 workers? Most counties in Pa have an 11% unemployment rate already.

Who is going to pay the $20 million to the State Police for liquor code enforcement?

There will still be an LCB (as much as all of you hate it) but it will be the same people in Harrisburg, doing the same things. The only people being hurt will be the low level employees that have bills to pay.

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Albert Brooks

11:43 am on Tuesday, March 5, 2013

First, there aren't 5000 people that work for the PLCB, at least according to the state ( I don't care what Wendell Young says) and a third of those are part time to begin with. Looked at it in terms of the entire state the PLCB is about six hundredths of one percent of the working population (.06%)
As listed in the current proposal the states will pay for the PSP with the increased taxes from the increased liquor sales.
Yes there will still be an LCB but it certainly won't be the same people we love to hate since their focus will be on regulation and licensing since they will no longer be in the wholesale and retail sales liquor business nor deciding what is allowed to be purchased in PA..

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