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Gourmet food store with kosher wine and craft beer approved across from Boston College over opposition of school, secretary of state

William Galvin and William Evans speak against proposed fancy food place

Secretary of State Bill Galvin, BC Police Chief Bill Evans lose battle against proposed wine and cheese at hearing.

The Boston Licensing Board today approved a packie license for a proposed gourmet food shop in the block of stores next to the Boston College Green Line stop over the strong objections of both the school - which serves beer and wine at on-campus events, including football games - and Secretary of State Bill Galvin, who lives just up the street.

Board members agreed unanimously that Andrew Arbeeny's proposed Mattie's Provisions and Spirits, 2193 Commonwealth Ave., would meet a "substantial public need" in an area of Brighton not well served by other neighborhood liquor stores and that they were satisfied that Arbeeny had outlined a series of measures to ensure booze-frenzied BC younglings don't turn the place into a one-stop gateway to drunkenness.

Even aside from requiring all employees take state-recommended courses for sussing out the underaged and dealing with inebriates, board Chairwoman Kathleen Joyce said, Arbeeny had agreed on several steps to block wet-behind-the-ears BC undergrads from getting their mitts on his alcohol: Arbeeny agreed not to sell nips, single bottles of alcohol, kegs, tobacco or lottery tickets and would not allow third-party delivery of his products - something that got one delivery service in trouble last year after BC students began using it en masse.

Arbeeny also agreed to open later on Sundays so as to not tempt any children going to the family mass at St. Ignatius Church across Commonwealth Avenue

At a hearing yesterday, Arbeeny added he would have another BC deterrent: As a small, 900-square-foot shop mostly given over to high-end food products, his alcohol would cost more than at certain other Brighton liquor stores his attorney could name, but didn't, because he wouldn't be getting a bulk discount from distributors.

"It seems like an upscale gourmet cheese store," board Chairwoman Kathleen Joyce said, adding that alone makes it different from other Brighton alcohol purveyors, the closest of which is a mile away from a neighborhood that houses not just BC students and classrooms but actual permanent residents - including Galvin, who lives just up Lake Street.

Galvin said he "vigorously" opposed opening a booze mart in what he called "basically a food court for Boston College" in a neighborhood that already has to deal with the detritus left on front lawns by drunken BC partiers, mere steps from a Catholic Church. He read a letter of opposition from a pastor at that church.

Bill Evans, current BC police chief and former Boston police commissioner, also opposed what he called "an unnecessary evil."

"It's basically almost on our campus," he said. "It's not a good fit for our university."

And, while he added he has great respect for the the Grealish family, longtime Brighton residents who own the block and whose family Arbeeny is a part of, he noted that Arbeeny himself lives in Scarsdale, NY. Arbeeny's manager for the shop, however, is a Massachusetts resident - as required by state law.

Through an aide, state Rep. Michael Moran, though, supported the proposal, in large part for his own admiration for the Grealish family.

The Brighton Allston Improvement Association has also backed the proposed shop. At a recent hearing before the Zoning Board of Appeal - which also approved the market - one BAIA official, who lives on Undine Road, said it would be unfair to punish her and other adult residents because BC can't control its students.

At their voting meeting today board members considered the "public" good rather than just the BC good, and concluded the Lake Street area could use a gourmet shop with alcohol.

Board member Liam Curran pointed in particular to Arbeeny's plan to stock kosher wines, which he said could not find regularly stocked in other Brighton packies, none of which are within a five-minute walk of Lake Street, anyway.

While Galvin and Evans both noted eight liquor stores in Brighton - plus some more just over the line in Newton - Curran said the proposed shop's location is different than ones in other neighborhoods where the board has grappled with, such as South Boston.

"The distances [between the proposed market and others] are much greater than what we usually talk about," he said.

"It's unique enough and compelling enough of an application to approve," board member Keeana Saxon said.

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Comments

Fuck your pearl-grasping, pool-table-scapegoating bullshit, Galvin, Evans, and BC.

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94

Reminds me of all the hysteria around the application from Streetcar in JP and how they were gonna somehow lure in and corrupt the kids across the street at the Curley School. "Hey kid, wanna buy an bottle of Barolo for 80 bucks?" F'k these busybodies

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The Brighton Allston Improvement Association has also backed the proposed shop. At a recent hearing before the Zoning Board of Appeal - which also approved the market - one BAIA official, who lives on Undine Road, said it would be unfair to punish her and other adult residents because BC can't control its students.

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54

Fail to instill self control - and pretend that the boys are incapable of it anyway. Then pretend that other-control is the only game in town.

Then be surprised when they have no self control, and demand the neighborhood enable this bs.

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17

It sounds like bc students are the problem, not thr store. Bc has some responsibility here.

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14

any bets on how long it takes for that high end liquor store to become low end?

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12

"Arbeeny agreed not to sell nips, single bottles of alcohol, kegs, tobacco or lottery tickets"

So, the license won't allow all the things that attract you.

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10

Rents are too high. They need the high end markup.

Class of '83 here to tell you the Jesuits were a lot of fun at Mod keg parties.

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19

Maybe if they taught these kids some self-control this wouldn't be a problem.

Just like the damn "abstinence only roadshow" my husband witnessed as a teacher, this denomination doesn't seem to believe in young males in particular having any ability to grow the fuck up. It is up to the girls to "not tempt them" and say no, up to the neighborhood to not have liquor stores, etc.

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33

I love seeing a small business defeat NIMBY brats.

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24

Don’t use motor vehicles, no?

If you ever learned how they get their products, you’d be aghast.

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14

BC sucked major here. Deal with it.

That this is reference to a comment made elsewhere, being brought up here because of how you're totally not taking internet comments personally.

Its going to be 80 today. GO OUTSIDE.

Big business wins over small people again. That's what Boston has become

Maybe I missed something but is "Mattie's Provisions and Spirits" some sort of a multinational chain store putting all the small shops out of business?

Seems to me that small business has prevailed and we should be thrilled to see small businesses opening their doors in Boston.

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17

Of trash-ass old Boston are dying, and I'm here for every second of it.

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12

The secretary of state trying to use his weight as a well-known public figure here to crush a small business is a bad look. Makes me wonder what kind of chicanery he's up to behind closed doors.

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You want extra consideration from Boston? Maybe up your PILOT to be more than the cost of a handful of students' tuition.

Will any of the gourmet foods be kosher as well? Brighton has a large Orthodox Jewish population, but no kosher food stores, so it’s an unmet need.

Dear god someone help Bill Galvin find clothes that fit

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n/t

Glad sanity prevailed in this case