One Million Dollars and a Whole Lot of Stupid Later, LCB Finally Pulls the Plug on Its Wine Kiosk Program
At long last the state has decided to call it "Game Over."
At long last the state has decided to call it "Game Over."
The state's audit shows the kiosk program is wasteful and a complete failure.
Wal-Mart's plans deliver yet another sharp blow to the LCB and its troubled wine vending machine program.
LCB CEO and Pennsylvania politicians just don't see eye to eye when it comes to boxed wine.
Turzai unearthed an LCB internal memo that recommended that the booze board not get tangled up with the wine kiosks.
From the get-go the discussion has been dominated with talk of prices and selection.
The former PLCB chair told crowds that privatization is now or never.
Though details on the "major development" are few, the Wine School is encouraging public support.
When lawmakers return to Harrisburg in the fall they will have bigger fish to fry.
The newly proposed rules promise big changes for how and where liquor and wine will be sold, but not beer.
The plan boasts a windfall for the state, but doesn't explain what will replace lost revenue.
The bill is coming but will anyone be there when it's introduced?
The chef wonders why the state is broke, even after recieving more than a half-billion dollars from the booze agency.
Plus: Famous Food is called a 'Train Wreck'; and rioting over food prices rattles Kenya, all in our morning news roundup.
House Republicans appear to be caving to union pressure and giving the booze authority what ti wants.
The liquor board's chairman cited the soft economy for his decision to keep prices on booze as is.
With privatization comes more aggressive marketing and sales efforts, which ultimately results in increased drinking.
Wegmans announced its ending its participation in the PLCB's wine kiosk program.
In the latest round of drama, the state's Chairman of the Senate Law and Justice Committee says change is good, but privatization is too ambitious.