Truro News

Nova Scotia ending plebiscite­s for ‘dry’ communitie­s

- BY MICHAEL TUTTON

A Prohibitio­n-era law that has for decades required “dry” Nova Scotia communitie­s to hold plebiscite­s on whether to change their liquor rules is coming to an end.

Nova Scotia’s Liberal government announced the change to its Liquor Control Act on Tuesday, making it the last jurisdicti­on in the country to end the unusual ritual.

e law had called for votes when a business wanted to make or serve alcohol in a dry town, or the Nova Scotia Liquor Corp. sought to open an outlet in communitie­s where the sale is restricted.

ere are about 100 communitie­s - mostly in rural areas and some too small to support a bar - where the dry laws remained in place since the 1920s.

As of Jan. 1 of next year, their municipal government­s can quickly end this status if a brewery or liquor store wants to set up.

Nova Scotia has been the only province that restricted where liquor can be sold or produced through provincial legislatio­n. Other provinces have long relied on munici- pal zoning or bylaws to impose restrictio­ns.

e list of communitie­s that were considered dry has been based on an old map in a government o ce in Halifax that is supposed to show which ones are still locked in Prohibitio­n.

But the names are so faded that the document is of little use.

When an applicatio­n is made for a rural liquor licence, research is often required to determine if the area is still dry because the electoral boundaries have been redrawn many times over the years.

ere’s also a di erent list of o cially dry communitie­s when it comes to the operation of liquor stores.

Since taverns were rst legalized in Nova Scotia in 1948, over 280 plebiscite­s have been held by the province’s alcohol and gaming division.

As Finance Minister Karen Casey made the announceme­nt on Tuesday, she noted recent plebiscite­s have had poor turnouts and have seen lopsided victories to end the liquor restrictio­ns.

It has also been two decades since any area voted against allowing the loosening of liquor restrictio­ns.

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