Los Angeles Times

Hesperia holds off on liquor limits

Store owners objected to proposed ban on single-serve alcohol and proposed to ‘self-police’ instead.

- Hailey Branson-Potts hailey.branson @latimes.com

The Hesperia City Council has delayed voting on a proposed ban of the sale of single-serve alcoholic beverages after complaints from store owners.

The council continued the proposal indefinite­ly so city officials could study its effects and have more dialogue with store owners, who said they were being made scapegoats for the city’s problems with homelessne­ss and crime.

At Tuesday’s council meeting, Alicen Wong, an attorney for several liquor store owners in attendance, asked the council to delay its decision so store owners could have a chance to develop “self-policing ” plans to reduce crime around their stores.

They want “to become engaged in their own activities in their own stores to reduce panhandlin­g, nuisance behaviors” and to work with the city and authoritie­s to halt the sale of alcohol to problemati­c customers, she said.

Mayor Eric Schmidt called for the delay. The proposal, introduced earlier this month, would have taken effect in August.

“I believe that as we gather more informatio­n, we’ll be able to flesh it out, and we’ll be able to come back with a responsibl­e set of conditions on an ordinance ... that would allow us to make a better decision,” Schmidt said.

Councilman Russell Blewett, who proposed the beverage ban to curb homelessne­ss and panhandlin­g, told the mayor, “The only flushing is you’re flushing it down the toilet.”

Blewett said the town has too many liquor stores and that he did not “want Hesperia to become another South Central L.A. or an East Los Angeles or a Pomona or a San Bernardino” — places he described as also having too many such stores.

Blewett said at the meeting that he “did a little field test” recently and sat outside three liquor stores.

“I had my little field glasses out there, and I watched,” he said. At two of the stores, he saw people come out of the store, open a beverage and begin drinking in the parking lot, he said.

Blewett said that although he is not a “nanny state guy” and has an “incredible distaste for the state and federal government,” the town had a responsibi­lity to protect residents by imposing a singleserv­e beverage ban.

The councilman told The Times last week that he doesn’t care if people drink as long as they do it responsibl­y. He said he does not drink.

Towns that have imposed similar bans in an attempt to reduce crime include San Bernardino and Victorvill­e, which borders Hesperia. Researcher­s at UC Riverside reviewed San Bernardino crime data and found areas with more liquor stores — including ones that devoted significan­t space to single-serve alcoholic beverages — had higher crime rates.

 ?? Glenn Koenig
Los Angeles Times ?? COUNCILMAN Russell Blewett, who proposed the single-serve alcoholic beverage ban to reduce crime, says Hesperia has too many liquor stores and he doesn’t want it to “become another South Central L.A.”
Glenn Koenig Los Angeles Times COUNCILMAN Russell Blewett, who proposed the single-serve alcoholic beverage ban to reduce crime, says Hesperia has too many liquor stores and he doesn’t want it to “become another South Central L.A.”

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