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Board to consider whether South Boston is reaching a tippling point when it comes to the number of convenience stores selling alcohol

The Boston Licensing Board deferred a vote today on a request from an East 8th Street market to let it sell beer and wine, so that board members can consider whether South Boston is on the verge of having too many places that sell adult beverages.

Board members emphasized they have nothing against Old Harbor Market, 334 East 8th St., or owner Fantir Patel. In fact, board Chairwoman Kathleen Joyce said she appreciated the "ton of support" in e-mails the board received for the store's request overnight from nearby residents, following a hearing yesterday.

At that hearing, Patel's attorney, Kristen Scanlon, said Patel, who bought and renovated the store about a year ago, wants to better serve his roughly 175 daily customers with a selection of craft beers and wines selling between $8 and $25 a bottle. She said he would not eliminate any shelf space for food or other items and would not sell single beer cans or bottles.

But noting this is the third request in a couple of months from Southie convenience stores wanting to sell alcohol or expand their offerings, coming on top of other such requests over the past year, Joyce and fellow board members say they want to take a couple weeks to examine the ramifications. They set Aug. 1 as the date on which they'll decide on Patel's request.

"South Boston is not that big of a place and we really need to dial in block by block." board member Liam Curran said. He noted that prospective owners of alcohol licenses need to prove a public need. "It's not just public sentiment that goes into 'public need,' there has be something more than that," he said.

Over the past year, the board has approved new beer and wine licenses for three convenience stores in the neighborhood, one about three blocks down East 8th St., for the Llanera Supermarket. The board also agreed to let Jamie's Market, which Patel's family owns on H Street on the other side of Telegraph Hill, expand from just beer and wine to all alcoholic beverages.

According to the city data portal, South Boston currently has 18 stores and one delivery service licensed to sell all alcoholic beverages, from beer to hard liquor, which includes both full-service packies and convenience stores. The neighborhood has another 6 markets stores that can sell beer and wine - plus the Polish Triangle's Baltic European Deli, which has an 02127 Zip code.

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Comments

What is the issue with letting any store sell beer & wine if they want? I wonder how many pizza shops there are in Southie. Maybe there are too many also?

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it’s a quality of life issue for the residents. Drinks, litter and the never ending Fireball nips all over the sidewalks and gutters.

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I say you have more of a quality of life issue from all the trash from Dunks than you do from a bodega selling beer and wine. You best get on the city to restrict those Dunks from opening another location. BTW, this is beer and wine not nips.

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...

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I think it's clear we need to set up a Pizza Licensing Authority. The City of Boston should have no more than 365 pizza producing facilities within its city limits. Special licenses should be required to produce any chicken-topped pizzas and many other questionable topping categories such as broccoli.

This needs to be dialed in block by block, house by house. Let's get started, people.

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Let us not speak of pineapple again

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There must be a study for the need for more pizza, not just sentiment, it’s more than that, else there’ll be tippage

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cannabis dispensaries? Or bars/restaurants? Or gun licenses?

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allows grocery stores to sell beer, as long as it's less than 25% of inventory. What's the problem here?

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You really want to emulate a city that only this year is requiring people to put their trash in trash cans?

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For Boston that train has long ago left the station. We have allowed renovations that converted every square inch in older houses and small apartment buildings, into living space. There’s literally no place to put a trash bin, which is why we use bags. If I had to use a bin, it would need to stay in my living room, and I would need to do construction to widen the door to get it in and out the door

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Because this never happened in old Southie.

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Your right it wouldn't have happened back day .
Because it's cost to much to have any business In old South Boston . Whitey would have taken a cut of your profits . People paid back in the day .

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Nobody should have any trouble getting a pizza, alcohol or their nails done in South Boston. There are enough of these establishments to satisfy demand.
Stay cool everyone and have a nice day.

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I'm just here to award 1000 dad-joke points for the headline.

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