Home delivery orders will arrive within two to three days; pick-up orders will be available in store within four to 12 days, according to the LCBO. Sousa said the new LCBO. He said the site means the LCBO is giving Ontario wineries and breweries access to more "virtual shelf space," which will increase their reach to consumers who may not always have access to their products in local stores. Sousa said wines from B. David Rockne Corrigan. Comments X. View the discussion thread.
Our journalism depends on you. Portrait Image. Follow RockneCorrigan. Stay up to date! Subscribe Now. When the first stores open in select communities, there are long lineups. Some customers gratefully grab their purchase; others grumble about the confusing new rules, the stock shortages, the unfairness of government monopolies. No, the substance in question is not marijuana, and this is not a vision of what might happen in Ontario when the first LCBO-run weed stores get up and running in After 11 years of prohibition, thirsty customers lined up for hours to buy legal liquor.
The first outlets were nothing like the boutique liquor stores of today: the original system was designed to make the experience of purchasing alcohol feel as shameful as possible, and to allow the province to pry into the private habits of Ontarians.
Temperance-minded newspapers hated what they saw that first week. The stores, generally located away from main streets, resembled banks. Clerks were stationed behind wire grills. New customers could not simply approach them, though: first, they had to be vetted by an LCBO employee whose job it was to determine whether they were moral enough to deserve an annual purchasing permit.
If the customer passed muster, they would be given a passport-sized permit book. To make a purchase, they filled out an order form and took it to a clerk, who reviewed their buying history. If the clerk felt the customer was purchasing too much, he made a note in the permit book, and the order was partially or fully refused. The Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario regulates grocery stores and ensures that beer, wine and cider are:.
Skip to main content. Alcohol sales in retail stores. Overview Currently, up to grocery stores across Ontario can sell beer and cider — including about that can sell wine.
0コメント