Laws including high-proof grain alcohol ban take effect Tuesday

Transcription

Laws including high-proof grain alcohol ban take effect Tuesday
Sign In
90° F
HOME
NEWS
HOT TOPICS
LOCAL
SPORTS
MLB All‑Star Snubs
ORIOLES
Tariq Khdeir
BUSINESS
ENTERTAINMENT
Beyonce, Jay Z In Baltimore
LIFE
John Lackey
HEALTH
OPINION
MARKETPLACE
VIDEO: Shark Attack
SERVICES
Search
Home > News > Maryland
Laws including high­proof grain alcohol
ban take effect Tuesday
Other changes affect earned income tax credit, estate tax and higher education endowments
Comments
10
216
0
Tweet
Recommend
62
Pick a neighborhood
Go
735
1 2 next | single page
TOP VIDEO
Deadly Holiday Weekend in
Chicago
Round two in the state gas tax hike. Starting Tuesday, the second phase of the gas tax goes into effect.
Marcus Washington reports.
Contact Us | Newsroom directory | Social Sun PHOTO GALLERIES
Round two in the state gas tax hike. Starting Tuesday, the second phase of the gas tax goes into effect.
By Danae King, The Baltimore Sun
8:31 p.m. EDT, June 30, 2014
Maryland joins at least a dozen other states Tuesday in banning the sale of 190­proof grain alcohol, a
measure that lawmakers hope will help to reduce sexual assaults and binge drinking among college
students.
Visionary Pets on Parade Ocean City through the
at AVAM
years
The bill is one of more than 200 that go into effect Tuesday; other bills expand the earned income tax
credit for low­income residents and exempt more wealthy Marylanders from the estate tax, overhaul
Baltimore City liquor board practices and establish incentives to encourage investment in research
universities.
The grain alcohol ban, backed by a group of university presidents as a safety measure, comes amid a
growing focus on rape and drinking to excess on campus. Del. Charles Barkley, a Montgomery County
Democrat, said increased awareness of the risks associated with grain alcohol bolstered support for the bill
he sponsored.
"Getting it off the market will maybe reduce problems at the college level," Barkley said, adding that
students have used it to get "bombed out of their mind," putting themselves in danger.
The 25 best episodes
of 'Seinfeld'
Baltimore dream
homes
MOST POPULAR NOW
Local bars and liquor stores sold off the last of their 190­proof (95 percent) alcohol Monday — if they
hadn't sold out already.
Resident unearths forgotten historic site in
Catonsville
Dick's Last Resort, a bar and restaurant on Pratt Street, sells 24 gallons a week of its popular drink Trash
Can Punch, which is made with Everclear grain alcohol, Cruzan Rum 151 and Hawaiian Punch. The bar
will continue to make the punch, but it won't include the Everclear, said manager Emily Snow.
Randallstown woman killed by drunken
driver in College Park, police say
While Barkley said liquor store owners and workers didn't organize opposition to the bill, and some said
Anne Arundel man charged in abduction of
12­year­old girl
they sold the last of their grain alcohol months ago, others said the ban is more about political
grandstanding.
A son dead, another son charged with the
crime
Jay Chung, manager of Charles Village Schnapp Shop, said the store only sold a few of its remaining 30
BGF and officials discussed improvements
to Baltimore jail, corrections officer says
bottles of grain alcohol this weekend and will try to sell the rest back to the distributor. The law is "an
annoyance more than anything because now we have to deal with this inventory; if we don't sell it, we
really can't do anything with it," he said.
BRAND PUBLISHING
This is sponsored content. (?)
He also called the law "an exercise in futility" and predicts manufacturers will soon come out with slightly
lower­proof alcohol, such as 188­proof alcohol, as a way around the law. He said lowering the allowable
level to 120­proof might have more of an impact.
VISIT MARYLAND
While Barkley said 151­proof is still a concern, lawmakers targeted what he called "the worst of the worst"
with the ban on 190­proof alcohol.
Free park­ing: Exploring
the gratis parts of
Maryland's National Park
system
Maryland residents will also see other changes in law starting Tuesday. The earned income tax credit will
VISIT MARYLAND
increase by 0.5 of a percentage point, the first of several increases until 2018.
It's time to take a dive
into Maryland's water
diversions
More than 250,000 Maryland tax returns claimed earned income credits of several hundred dollars on
average in tax year 2010, according to a legislative analysis of the bill.
Another measure cuts the number of families subject to the estate tax, which proponents hope will
encourage more millionaires to stay in Maryland. Eventually estates of less than $5 million would be
exempt.
The changes in the Baltimore liquor board come after a state audit revealed widespread mismanagement
and spotty enforcement. The mayor will now have oversight of the board, and it must be more transparent
with records posted online. Other bills allow the board to issue or transfer some beer, wine and liquor
licenses in different areas of the city where it couldn't before.
Other laws encourage investment in higher education. The state plans to set up a fund to match donations
of $500,000 or more to endow chairs at research institutions in an effort to increase investment in the
colleges.
Another bill creates a state income tax credit for donations made to an eligible foundation or trust that
supports charitable activities in the community or area that it serves.
The law to gradually raise Maryland's minimum wage to $10.10 an hour also takes effect Tuesday, but
employers won't have to start paying the first increase to $8 an hour until January. Subsequent increases
take effect annually in July.
Members of the General Assembly had attempted to pass the grain alcohol ban in previous years but were
stopped in the House of Delegates. This year, university officials worked to sway delegates.
David Jernigan, associate professor at the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health,
said grain alcohol is more than twice as potent as a typical shot of liquor.
He said he thinks the bill was approved now — after neighboring states Virginia, West Virginia and
Pennsylvania passed it — because in the past seven years young people have started to shift from drinking
beer to drinking more distilled spirits.
Copyright © 2014, The Baltimore Sun
Comments
10
1 2 next | single page
216
0
Tweet
62
Recommend
735
We've upgraded our reader commenting system. Learn more about the new features.
Log In | Register
10 Comments
powered by:
Write your comment here
Record video
Upload video
Upload image
Submit
Sign In
91° F
HOME
NEWS
HOT TOPICS
LOCAL
SPORTS
MLB All‑Star Snubs
ORIOLES
Tariq Khdeir
BUSINESS
ENTERTAINMENT
Beyonce, Jay Z In Baltimore
LIFE
John Lackey
HEALTH
OPINION
MARKETPLACE
VIDEO: Shark Attack
SERVICES
Search
Home > News > Maryland
Laws including high­proof grain alcohol
ban take effect Tuesday
Other changes affect earned income tax credit, estate tax and higher education endowments
Comments
10
216
2
Tweet
62
Recommend
Pick a neighborhood
Go
735
previous 1 2 | single page
TOP VIDEO
Raw: Near Miss at Barcelona
Airport
"We do all sorts of things together to make everyone safer," Jernigan said. "This is the equivalent of a
traffic light in alcohol, this is putting a big red light in front of this product, which is so potentially
dangerous."
Wells Discount Liquors in Rodgers Forge stopped selling the 190­proof version of Everclear a few months
ago in favor of the 151­proof version, said beverage consultant Patrick McKee. McKee said 190­proof is
too high and unnecessary for human consumption.
"You can get the same effect from a lower proof. ... Most folks are looking for a high­alcohol, flavorless
beverage to mix," he said. "151­proof is still rock­and­roll, big­time alcohol."
Some liquor store workers said grain alcohol was no longer a big seller. Tom Ward, manager of Eddie's
Liquors of Charles Village, said he doesn't think the new law will affect the store's revenue because it has
"got a lot of other things that sell much better than that." He said mostly 21­ to 24­year­olds purchased
grain alcohol.
Chung said he has "seen people get in much more trouble with 80­proof" liquor and that grain alcohol is
more of a "once in a while ... niche" item. Chung estimated the store sells up to 30 times more 80­proof
alcohol than grain alcohol.
Contact Us | Newsroom directory | Social Sun PHOTO GALLERIES
Baltimore Sun reporter Erin Cox contributed to this article.
[email protected]
twitter.com/danaeking
New laws
More than 200 bills that passed this year take effect Tuesday. Here are how some of those bills will affect
you:
Visionary Pets on Parade Ocean City through the
at AVAM
years
•Gas tax: The tax per gallon will increase by less than half a penny to 27.4 cents per gallon, thanks to a
provision of the 2013 gas tax that ties annual increases to inflation.
•Community giving: Donating to endow a qualified community foundation can earn you a tax credit of 25
percent of the donation, thanks to a bill designed to spur investment in community groups.
•Estate tax: Maryland is slowly raising the threshold of estates that must be taxed under state law from $1
million to $5 million. The law that takes effect Tuesday exempts estates of $1.5 million or less, provided
the decedent dies after Jan. 1, 2015.
•Minimum wage: Maryland is slowing raising its minimum wage to $10.10 an hour. The law that takes
effect Tuesday makes it official, and businesses need to prepare to start paying minimum­wage workers $8
an hour in January, up from the current minimum of $7.25.
The 25 best episodes
of 'Seinfeld'
Baltimore dream
homes
MOST POPULAR NOW
•Liquor board reforms: A sweeping set of reforms takes effect to reshape the troubled Baltimore City
Board of Liquor License Commissioners. Among several provisions, the law puts the liquor board under
more direct supervision of the mayor and requires more electronic records and greater transparency from
an agency that's been beset by bureaucratic problems.
Resident unearths forgotten historic site in
Catonsville
•"E­nnovation" fund: As part of a bill to encourage investment in Maryland's research colleges, the state
will set up a fund to match donations to endow chairs at Maryland's research institutions. Starting next
summer, the next governor will be required to set aside $8.5 million to pay to match donations of $500,000
Anne Arundel man charged in abduction of
12­year­old girl
Randallstown woman killed by drunken
driver in College Park, police say
or more.
•Earned income tax credit: As a way to help the state's poorest residents, a new law will slightly increase
the amount of money awarded to low­income workers who already qualify for the state's earned income tax
credit. The amount of the credit will increase from 25 percent to 25.5 percent this year, and it will
eventually go up to 28 percent in 2018.
A son dead, another son charged with the
crime
BGF and officials discussed improvements
to Baltimore jail, corrections officer says
BRAND PUBLISHING
Copyright © 2014, The Baltimore Sun
This is sponsored content. (?)
previous 1 2 | single page
VISIT MARYLAND
Comments
10
216
2
Tweet
62
Recommend
735
Free park­ing: Exploring
the gratis parts of
Maryland's National Park
system
VISIT MARYLAND
We've upgraded our reader commenting system. Learn more about the new features.
It's time to take a dive
into Maryland's water
diversions
Log In | Register
10 Comments
powered by:
Write your comment here
Record video
Upload video
Submit
Upload image
Follow
Newest
Overtaxed and Underpaid Rank 148
We don't want underage kids passing out drunk at the inner harbor
5 days ago 0 Likes
Like Reply Share
Gregg218 Rank 1963
I stocked up. Not that I ever really used it other than in various mixed concoctions but the law is
stupid and does nothing other than stop the sale of an otherwise legal and harmless product. If
you want to stop college kids from getting drunk then raise the age limit to 23 and make the
campuses a police state. If Everclear had been distilled in Maryland then this would never have
come up.
6 days ago 0 Likes
Like Reply Share
VirgilforDante Rank 11
https://mayday.us/internethasasuperpac/ Come on sun! Do we have to go to reddit to get important news about money in democrac????
6 days ago 0 Likes
Like Reply Share
Matt in Highlandtown Rank 55
The popularity of Everclear came from the fact that it was relatively flavorless. 151­proof rum is
anything but flavorless. If something is flavorless it's easier to conceal in mixed drinks. Back when I was a young man, lo these many decades ago, my fraternity used Everclear in the
punch that we served up to the young ladies at parties (bros don't drink punch, to be clear ­­ only
beer). We did so because it got them drunker faster, and thus more pliable. I can see now why
that might be an... » more
6 days ago 1 Like
Like Reply Share
Josh Croteau Rank 2040
Oh, PA residents and their opinions on taxes in our state? Maybe if so many people didn't up and move we wouldn't need the additional tax.
6 days ago 0 Likes
Like Reply Share