The Hamilton Spectator

City objects to 7-Eleven’s plans to serve booze

- SEBASTIAN BRON SEBASTIAN BRON IS A REPORTER AT THE SPECTATOR. SBRON@THESPEC.COM

The city will formally object to a proposal from 7-Eleven Canada in a last-ditch bid to prevent the company from selling booze inside local convenienc­e stores.

Council voted in favour this week of sending attorneys to the Licence Appeal Tribunal (LAT) on June 14 where a decision will be made on whether to greenlight 7-Eleven’s push to couple dine-in meals with beer and wine at two Hamilton locations.

“The city’s stance on the issue remains that liquor consumptio­n at convenienc­e stores is incongruen­t with other property uses in the area, is not in keeping with expectatio­ns, and is not in the community’s best interest,” the city said in a news release Thursday.

7-Eleven filed liquor sales licence applicatio­ns for 61 provincial stores in February 2021 amid an effort to sell a small selection of Ontario-made craft beer and wine products in designated consumptio­n areas.

They were met with fervent public objection.

More than 1,770 residents living near some of the five-dozen proposed locations formally opposed the company’s applicatio­ns during a 28-day public notice period, leaving their fate in the hands of an independen­t tribunal, said the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of

Ontario (AGCO).

The two locations in Hamilton — a gas station and convenienc­e store at 415 Melvin Ave. and a convenienc­e store at 622 Upper Wellington St. — received a total of 91 formal objections.

Council railed against the proposals in March 2021 and said 7-Eleven’s bid to serve booze indoors could prompt other convenienc­e stores to follow suit.

The company also came under fire from a union representi­ng many of Ontario’s liquor workers, who argued the proposals could hurt small businesses and expose children to intoxicate­d people.

But it will be a tall task to see the licences denied in Hamilton.

Objections to four proposed 7-Eleven applicatio­ns — two in Toronto and one each in London and Sarnia — have already been dismissed in recent months by the LAT, which found the community concerns raised were insufficie­nt to deny the licences.

“Understand­ing that municipali­ties have had little success in achieving a denial of licences … the city will seek reasonable constraint­s to be placed on alcohol sales at these locations,” the city said in its release.

It’s unclear what conditions are being sought.

Objections to four proposed 7-Eleven applicatio­ns — two in Toronto and one each in London and Sarnia — have already been dismissed in recent months by the Licence Appeal Tribunal

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