Monday, June 27, 2011
Powers That Be
Quincy Mayor John Spring has declared a state of emergency for the city.
80% of Adams county has no power.
Wouldn't a massive power outage be an Emergency anyways ?
With no power, how do you let everyone know ?
Does it really matter ?
Friday, June 24, 2011
Gems officials hope 2-for-1 beer deal does not attracts ILCC agents.
Update:6/24/11
The two-for-one beer deal being offered at Wednesday night Quincy Gems home games is being discontinued after team officials were told by the Illinois Liquor Control Commission that it is not allowed under state law.
LIQUOR(235 ILCS 5/) Liquor Control Act of 1934.
(235 ILCS 5/Art. VI heading)
ARTICLE VI. GENERAL PROVISIONS
(235 ILCS 5/6‑28) (from Ch. 43, par. 144d)
Sec. 6‑28. Happy hours prohibited.
(a) All retail licensees shall maintain a schedule of the prices charged for all drinks of alcoholic liquor to be served and consumed on the licensed premises or in any room or part thereof. Whenever a hotel or multi‑use establishment which holds a valid retailer's license operates on its premises more than one establishment at which drinks of alcoholic liquor are sold at retail, the hotel or multi‑use establishment shall maintain at each such establishment a separate schedule of the prices charged for such drinks at that establishment.
(b) No retail licensee or employee or agent of such licensee shall:
(1) serve 2 or more drinks of alcoholic liquor at
one time to one person for consumption by that one person, except conducting product sampling pursuant to Section 6‑31 or selling or delivering wine by the bottle or carafe;
(2) sell, offer to sell or serve to any person an
unlimited number of drinks of alcoholic liquor during any set period of time for a fixed price, except at private functions not open to the general public;
(3) sell, offer to sell or serve any drink of
alcoholic liquor to any person on any one date at a reduced price other than that charged other purchasers of drinks on that day where such reduced price is a promotion to encourage consumption of alcoholic liquor, except as authorized in paragraph (7) of subsection (c);
(4) increase the volume of alcoholic liquor
contained in a drink, or the size of a drink of alcoholic liquor, without increasing proportionately the price regularly charged for the drink on that day;
(5) encourage or permit, on the licensed premises,
any game or contest which involves drinking alcoholic liquor or the awarding of drinks of alcoholic liquor as prizes for such game or contest on the licensed premises; or
(6) advertise or promote in any way, whether on or
off the licensed premises, any of the practices prohibited under paragraphs (1) through (5).
(c) Nothing in subsection (b) shall be construed to prohibit a licensee from:
(1) offering free food or entertainment at any time;
(2) including drinks of alcoholic liquor as part of
a meal package;
(3) including drinks of alcoholic liquor as part of
a hotel package;
(4) negotiating drinks of alcoholic liquor as part
of a contract between a hotel or multi‑use establishment and another group for the holding of any function, meeting, convention or trade show;
(5) providing room service to persons renting rooms
at a hotel;
(6) selling pitchers (or the equivalent, including
but not limited to buckets), carafes, or bottles of alcoholic liquor which are customarily sold in such manner, or selling bottles of spirits, and delivered to 2 or more persons at one time; or
(7) increasing prices of drinks of alcoholic liquor
in lieu of, in whole or in part, a cover charge to offset the cost of special entertainment not regularly scheduled.
(d) A violation of this Act shall be grounds for suspension or revocation of the retailer's license as provided by this Act.
(Source: P.A. 94‑1112, eff. 2‑27‑07.)
.
The two-for-one beer deal being offered at Wednesday night Quincy Gems home games is being discontinued after team officials were told by the Illinois Liquor Control Commission that it is not allowed under state law.
LIQUOR(235 ILCS 5/) Liquor Control Act of 1934.
(235 ILCS 5/Art. VI heading)
ARTICLE VI. GENERAL PROVISIONS
(235 ILCS 5/6‑28) (from Ch. 43, par. 144d)
Sec. 6‑28. Happy hours prohibited.
(a) All retail licensees shall maintain a schedule of the prices charged for all drinks of alcoholic liquor to be served and consumed on the licensed premises or in any room or part thereof. Whenever a hotel or multi‑use establishment which holds a valid retailer's license operates on its premises more than one establishment at which drinks of alcoholic liquor are sold at retail, the hotel or multi‑use establishment shall maintain at each such establishment a separate schedule of the prices charged for such drinks at that establishment.
(b) No retail licensee or employee or agent of such licensee shall:
(1) serve 2 or more drinks of alcoholic liquor at
one time to one person for consumption by that one person, except conducting product sampling pursuant to Section 6‑31 or selling or delivering wine by the bottle or carafe;
(2) sell, offer to sell or serve to any person an
unlimited number of drinks of alcoholic liquor during any set period of time for a fixed price, except at private functions not open to the general public;
(3) sell, offer to sell or serve any drink of
alcoholic liquor to any person on any one date at a reduced price other than that charged other purchasers of drinks on that day where such reduced price is a promotion to encourage consumption of alcoholic liquor, except as authorized in paragraph (7) of subsection (c);
(4) increase the volume of alcoholic liquor
contained in a drink, or the size of a drink of alcoholic liquor, without increasing proportionately the price regularly charged for the drink on that day;
(5) encourage or permit, on the licensed premises,
any game or contest which involves drinking alcoholic liquor or the awarding of drinks of alcoholic liquor as prizes for such game or contest on the licensed premises; or
(6) advertise or promote in any way, whether on or
off the licensed premises, any of the practices prohibited under paragraphs (1) through (5).
(c) Nothing in subsection (b) shall be construed to prohibit a licensee from:
(1) offering free food or entertainment at any time;
(2) including drinks of alcoholic liquor as part of
a meal package;
(3) including drinks of alcoholic liquor as part of
a hotel package;
(4) negotiating drinks of alcoholic liquor as part
of a contract between a hotel or multi‑use establishment and another group for the holding of any function, meeting, convention or trade show;
(5) providing room service to persons renting rooms
at a hotel;
(6) selling pitchers (or the equivalent, including
but not limited to buckets), carafes, or bottles of alcoholic liquor which are customarily sold in such manner, or selling bottles of spirits, and delivered to 2 or more persons at one time; or
(7) increasing prices of drinks of alcoholic liquor
in lieu of, in whole or in part, a cover charge to offset the cost of special entertainment not regularly scheduled.
(d) A violation of this Act shall be grounds for suspension or revocation of the retailer's license as provided by this Act.
(Source: P.A. 94‑1112, eff. 2‑27‑07.)
.
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Say WHAT ??
Alderman split over $256 for recycle bins. Read it here.
Mayor breaks the tie and decides for the cheaper Canadian company.
The Mayor then added: "That's why we've always accepted the lowest bid."
A month ago the Quincy Taxpayer lost almost $6 million dollars on a hydro dream.
Who was the low bidder on this ??
.
Monday, June 13, 2011
Quincy's # 1 cable company
Comcast spokesperson Angelynne Amores said a mudslide around 8:30 a.m. damaged the cable system of a vendor outside of Quincy. She said she didn't have an exact location of where the mudslide happened except that "it wasn't in Quincy."
Amores said Comcast would not release the number of its customers who were affected by the outages.
Cable and Internet out for 12 hrs and no notice what so ever and a pretty piss poor explaination of where it happened and how many affected.
Isn't it great when the city gives you a Monopoly.
Direct TV ?
Amores said Comcast would not release the number of its customers who were affected by the outages.
Cable and Internet out for 12 hrs and no notice what so ever and a pretty piss poor explaination of where it happened and how many affected.
Isn't it great when the city gives you a Monopoly.
Direct TV ?
Monday, June 06, 2011
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