Origin and Purpose
The Department of Alcoholic Beverage
Control has been in existence since 1935. In that year, the Utah State
Legislature created the department by statute and charged it with the
responsibility of conducting, licensing and regulating the sale of alcoholic
beverages in a manner and at prices which reasonably satisfy the public
demand and protect the public interest, including the rights of citizens
who do not wish to be involved with alcoholic beverages. The legislature
also mandated that the department be operated as a public business using
sound management principles and practices.
Two years earlier, the ratification
of the Twenty First Amendment not only ended national prohibition, but
it also gave individual states the right to choose their own system of
controlling and distributing alcoholic beverages. The Utah legislature
at that time believed that the state, rather than private enterprise,
should control sales.
The purpose of control is to make
liquor available to those adults who choose to drink responsibly - but
not to promote the sale of liquor. By keeping liquor out of the private
marketplace, no economic incentives are created to maximize sales, open
more liquor stores or sell to underage persons. Instead, all policy incentives
to promote moderation and to enforce existing liquor laws is enhanced.
Utah's system of controlling the
sale of alcoholic beverages is not as unique as most people believe. There
are eighteen states and one county in Maryland which control the sale
of alcoholic beverages at either the wholesale or retail level. These
jurisdictions account for 28% of the nation's population. These states
share a common purpose - to promote moderation in the consumption of alcoholic
beverages and to discourage excess and abuse.
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