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Here’s how the Illinois legislature’s proposed alcohol delivery bill is about to hurt small retailers, bars, restaurants and consumers in favor of special interests

Delivery of beer, wine and liquor by retailers in Ilinois - new bill Chicago liquor license lawyer attorney

Delivery of beer, wine and liquor by retailers in Ilinois - new bill Chicago liquor license lawyer attorney

Caleb Whitmer’s recent National Review article assessing the nonsensical and anti-consumer state of alcohol regulation poignantly concluded that:

“Government and business interests have animated the corpses of rotting temperance laws, ironically employing them to prop up some of the forces that the Prohibition movement was intent on knocking down. As a result, consumers pay more for alcohol, have access to less variety, and are more limited in where they can purchase it than they otherwise would be. Reasonable restrictions on alcohol are, of course, appropriate, but — at the risk of sounding pollyannaish — ideally lawmakers would craft those restrictions with reference to a common good greater than replenishing state coffers or protecting local liquor stores’ bottom lines.”

Rather than set about the interesting and voter-friendly task of coming up with a new and fair alcohol regulatory scheme, Illinois’s legislators are plowing ahead to help special interests restrict the rights of small business alcohol retailers such as bar, restaurant, and packaged goods stores and consumers with SB0054, a bill that would impact and (perhaps without really accomplishing it) regulate certain retailers’ rights to deliver alcohol to consumers.

The bill addressing home delivery (and curbside and other delivery) of alcohol in Illinois has already passed the state Senate and his currently pending in the House.

In its current and amended form, it:

What’s wrong with all that you ask, dear reader…

Well, for starters – Illinois does not need an alcohol delivery bill as deliveries are already allowed and not restricted for any retailers except, perhaps, by local municipal ordinance.

The Illinois Liquor Control Act has explicitly granted the privilege of delivery to retailers for many years under 235 ILCS 5/5-1(d)

(d) A retailer’s license shall allow the licensee to sell and offer for sale at retail, only in the premises specified in the license, alcoholic liquor for use or consumption, but not for resale in any form. Nothing in this amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly shall deny, limit, remove, or restrict the ability of a holder of a retailer’s license to transfer, deliver, or ship alcoholic liquor to the purchaser for use or consumption subject to any applicable local law or ordinance. Any retail license issued to a manufacturer shall only permit the manufacturer to sell beer at retail on the premises actually occupied by the manufacturer. For the purpose of further describing the type of business conducted at a retail licensed premises, a retailer’s licensee may be designated by the State Commission as (i) an on premise consumption retailer, (ii) an off premise sale retailer, or (iii) a combined on premise consumption and off premise sale retailer. Notwithstanding any other provision of this subsection (d), a retail licensee may sell alcoholic liquors to a special event retailer licensee for resale to the extent permitted under subsection (e).

That’s right – currently, a retailer can deliver throughout the state with no restriction unless a local municipality has imposed one for its territory. There’s no implementing regulation for this right – which is how this “delivery” issue should be dealt with (*cough* the Illinois Liquor Control Commission should propose a regulation *cough*) – just like every other statute – agencies provide regulation for interpretation.

This entire bill is a restriction on the right to deliver not a grant of a right to deliver, with the exception of the elimination of the right of a local liquor authority to regulate delivery. (Which, itself was already a ripe issue for a constitutional challenge as well as a challenge to the authority of local liquor license authorities as there were already open questions as to whether they could restrict deliveries from outside their borders either because they lacked that authority under the Illinois Liquor Control Act; they lacked the right to infringe on lawful commerce when the parties agreed that the “sale” took place on the premises of the out-of-town retailer; or they lacked the authority to impact a third-party delivery arrangement where a consumer paid for delivery and, in essence, delivered it to themselves (that last one still isn’t addressed here, btw. – e.g. What about the contractual relationship where the parties agree, pursuant to the UCC and through contract, that the seller is simply passing the alcohol to the hired deliverer contracted by the “consumer” and not the retailer?).)

So, how are Illinois’s bars, restaurants, small liquor stores and liquor consumers getting hurt and what’s left unanswered?

Let’s start:

I believe the point is made and hopefully this sparks some discussion as to why this bill is necessary or what on earth its purpose is.

If shipping is allowed state-wide, but deliveries are not, what’s the point?

Also, if deliveries mean shipping, then this bill is poorly crafted and seeks restriction through ambiguity and will not accomplish it as different terms are used in 235 ILCS 5/5-1(d). And the shipping term is recognized and utilized in 235 ILCS 5/6-29 for winery shippers, showing that where shipping is meant, shipping is used, and not delivery.

Additionally, the constitutional issues should be addressed.

The bill would limit the rights of consumers and small businesses to obtain alcohol that came into the state and has even gone through the three-tier system. Those businesses (usually in places with major populations like Chicago) with access to the limited quantities of rare product should be allowed to deliver it to Illinois consumers and consumers around the state should have the benefit of getting rare or limited alcohol beverages even though they don’t live in those places.

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