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Liquor Privatization Bill Clears State House Panel Hurdle

A proposal to sell off most of Pennsylvania's state-owned liquor system and its wholesale distribution network moved ahead with a vote on the Legislature on Monday, although its prospects to become law remain uncertain.

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — A proposal to sell off most of Pennsylvania's state-owned liquor system and its wholesale distribution network moved ahead with a vote on the Legislature on Monday, although its prospects to become law remain uncertain.

The state House Liquor Control Committee voted 15-to-10 to advance a Republican-backed proposal that was very similar to a bill that passed the House but stalled in the Senate during the last legislative session.

"At the end of the day, this is a private retail and wholesale business that, in every other state except for one, is managed by the private sector," said Rep. Chris Ross, R-Chester, the committee chairman. "We don't have state grocery stores. We don't have state gas stations."

The proposal would create 1,200 licenses for retail businesses to sell wine and liquor, giving the existing beer distributors the first shot at buying them. All but 100 of the 600 government-owned and -operated liquor stores would gradually close and employees there would get help finding new jobs.

Democrats, who voted unanimously against the similar bill in 2013, raised questions about whether the law would create the short-term windfall its supporters have projected, money that could help plug a state budget hole this year.

Rep. Matt Bradford, D-Montgomery, said he wanted to know the appraised value of the state's existing stores.

"Are we truly maximizing the value, are we giving the taxpayers back the money they put into the system?" Bradford asked.

Ross said there has been "an extensive effort" to value the system, but different locations have different values and part of the proposal is to try to help businesses that are already selling alcohol.

"We have a chance, in a historic way, to move outside of a failed system that was never meant to really be successful, if we think about it honestly," Ross said.

The license fees will vary, depending on the population of the county where they are located. After beer distributors get the first chance to buy them, they will be sold to the public at a much higher price.

Grocery stores would only be able to sell wine, not liquor, with sales limited to 12 bottles per transaction. Beer distributors, now limited to selling at least a case at a time, would be able to sell six-packs or 12-packs. Restaurants, which now can sell 12-packs of beer for take-out, would be able to sell up to a case, in six-pack increments.

The bill still requires a House floor vote before it could be sent to the Senate for consideration.