The Vancouver Sun: New city liquor bylaw to limit sale of fine wines in Vancouver restaurants
Imagine this: Out for a meal in a Vancouver restaurant, you spend $30 to $40 on entrees. But when you order a $45 bottle of B.C. wine, your waiter says: “Sorry, this is Vancouver; you’ll have to buy something cheaper.”
That’s exactly what could happen after Jan. 1, when the city’s new liquor licensing bylaw comes into effect.
An obscure subsection of the bylaw casts a regulatory net — intended to nab restaurants that are all bar and no food — that snares just about every other restaurant with a wine list aspiring to offer more than bulk wines. Under the bylaw, approved by city council Oct. 8 and coming into effect Jan. 1, the food portion of all restaurant receipts must account for at least 50 per cent of all revenues over any eight-hour period.
The city is imposing an annual $3-a-seat tax on all city restaurants, raising money to hire food police who will make sure restaurants comply.
Soooooooo brutal. And really short sighted.
The slightly silver lining part about this is that it appears the law may be re-written to something more realistic/not bad for the business and customer.
(via blownspeakers)
6 notes
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teekayvee reblogged this from vanmega and added:
Or, maybe this will encourage restaurants to lower their markup on wine? For instance, a $15/glass of Kettle Valley...
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siofan reblogged this from vanmega and added:
I think something similar to this was already in place for certain restaurant licenses. When I was a dirtbag up in...
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towerofsleep liked this
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vanmega reblogged this from blownspeakers and added:
Soooooooo brutal. And really short sighted. The slightly silver lining part about this is that it appears
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blownspeakers posted this