![]() | BhamWeekly: Glancing at the agenda, it looks like TC Cannon is applying for a liquor license for TC's. Is TC's coming back, or already back? #bham about 17 hours ago |
| littlebrownjen: "If they can pay you $5000 for a liquor license, give them their hours. Or else let them give their money to someone else" about 1 day ago |
![]() | indyrestscene: @naisacafe do you have a liquor license or is it byob? about 3 days ago |
![]() | thee_geekent: @jenvetterli @nakedknitgirl they get their liquor license today or tomorrow... it seems they've been overwhelmed from day one about 6 days ago |
![]() | PourHouseTampa: Everything was squared away for the liquor license today. Will be submitted to the city tomorrow or Friday. A big scratch off the list! about 7 days ago |
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The process for getting a liquor license is as dated as this old Milwaukee tavern. |
| By Doug Hissom Special to OnMilwaukee.com E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Doug Hissom |
| Published June 19, 2009 at 4:28 p.m. |
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(page 2)
Public Subsidy for Public Entity: UW-Milwaukee is undertaking a substantial dorm building boom, but does it really need city subsidies to make it happen? That's what the city will decide this week and in meetings through the next month.
The city's Redevelopment Authority is entertaining proposals to not only declare the former Hometown gas station on North Avenue by the river as blighted, but also give the university low-interest loans to build a 700-room dorm on the site. The plan has been for developer Barry Mandel to build it for the university. The cost of the building is estimated to be about $50 million and the city is proposing floating $23 million for the project. The building would then be off the property tax rolls.
All Wet: At least one County Board member thinks County Exec Scott Walker's plan to close two indoor pools is all wet.
Bay View County Supervisor Marina Dimitrijevic asked Walker to reconsider his plan to close Noyes and Pulaski indoor pools in order to help cover a budget deficit in 2009.
She says the move would inadvertently affect seniors and seems a little miffed that Walker didn't consult with board members on the matter.
"Senior citizens ... quite frankly have no where else to go for the indoor pool needs that they have. They have annual passes and look forward to using these pools daily, many who take aerobics classes to aid them in their rehabilitation as they age," she wrote Walker.
She said her constituents would favor reduced hours and higher fees to keep them open. She also said that some of her constituents were put off by their treatment from the exec's office, saying they were "rudely treated."
"I find that unacceptable and was very disappointed to hear that, as I know that your staff normally deals with constituents in a professional matter. One woman said that your staff was very argumentative and even said, 'The lady asked me if I had any alternative cost-saving solutions,'" Dimitrijevic wrote.
License Check: Rules for getting a bartender's license or a bar manager's license could be tightened severely under a proposal by Ald. Milele Coggs. Her plan would bar bartenders from getting licenses if they were convicted of a drunk driving offense within the past year.
Currently, members of the Licenses Committee have sort of an unwritten rule that if there are three drunk driving convictions on a person's record, they won't get a license. But, like everything else on the committee, that rule varies. Committee members seem to ask the question, "What is the status of alcohol in your life?" when a convicted drunk driver shows up for a license.
"The Common Council finds that the illegal use of alcohol by an individual driving under the influence of alcohol demonstrates a lack of proper judgment in the handling of alcohol to the extent that it places the health, safety and welfare of the public at risk," reads Coggs' resolution, which will be considered next week.
The city attorney's office issued an opinion pointing out inconsistencies in the plan, noting that a drunk driving ticket and conviction could happen between the time someone applies for a license and the Common Council considers it, so it wouldn't be picked up in police reports.
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2 comments about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by corrina252 on June 19, 2009 at 9:43 p.m. (report)
Since when is it the responsibility of county government to subsidize swimming pools? How many pools are in the park system already 30, 32? Do we really need to subsidize golf courses and pools that only a small percentage of the county population utilizes? And how many times do the liberals/socialists in town have to complain about our "crumbling" park system? What a joke! The parks are fine and so what if the grass gets cut once a week instead of twice a week? Do any of you folks know a county parks employee? This type of work is as close to a mafia no-show job there is. Milwaukee County government has been fleecing the county taxpayer for decades and the only individual to challenge it, Scott Walker, is portrayed as Satan himself by the liberal media in this city.
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Posted by corrina252 on June 19, 2009 at 9:34 p.m. (report)
I called Zeilinski to ask why he was against that particular convenience store selling beer and part of his idiotic response was that the building had graffiti on it and that Cafe Central was against it!?! After talking a bit further all I could think about was, for the love of god, are these the types of buffoons running this city?
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