Thursday, January 31, 2008

The Liquor Debate On TV


WSAV-TV in Savannah aired a two-part series on the Effingham Liquor Referendum tonight. You can view the video clips on their website here.
And you can read and view last night's report on WTOC-TV here.

Former county commissioner gives me a call


My phone rang at home tonight, and the man on the other end identified himself as Charles Usher, a former Effingham County commissioner. He said, "I want to thank you for opposing this liquor referendum, and for not being afraid to speak the truth." He went on to say that when he was commissioner, we did not have beer and wine, and people kept pressuring them to allow beer and wine, so he did a study to find out if alcohol brought in sufficient revenue to pay for itself. The study showed that it did not; that whatever revenue was produced from alcohol taxes was spent on law enforcement and other increased social services.

Letter from an Applebee's waitress


The following e-mail was sent to me by a waitress at Applebee's, who requested that I keep her name anonymous:

I have been following the battle you are fighting right now. I would like to throw out my two cents. I live in Effingham and have my whole life, I recently passed my real estate exam and am a licensed realtor, I also am a waitress for Applebee's. I am also a mother of two girls, a member of your church and a friend of someone killed by a drunk driver. I am opposed to the liquor for many reasons. I would like to state that I have not heard one word about any full service restaurants even considering coming to Effingham, most corporate businesses require as part of a franchise agreement that there be so much of a population around the area intended to build which we do not have yet. This is to keep a big name business from having to have closed locations due to inactivity or slow business. I also know Bryan County allows liquor and that the only city to benefit by having full service restaurants is Richmond Hill. With in Bryan county, Ellabell, Pembroke, etc.. there are no big box chains except McDonalds and Dairy Queen I know they don't have liquor, But with in 10 miles of each other there are 2 bars on the outside of Pembroke on the same road. There are about 5 bars in the rural areas of Bryan county and no FULL SERVICE RESTAURANT'S. I know everyone is being deceived into thinking that we will get a great place to go eat if it's passed but that is not guaranteed. Just look toward Bryan County for a example. Rincon or Springfield could get a restaurant but what about Guyton, Shawnee, Marlow, Sandhill, etc... they will most likely wind up allowing bars because that looks to be the trend.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Live Liquor Debate on Radio this Wednesday


I will be debating the Effingham Liquor Referendum live on the radio this Wednesday, January 30, from 8 to 9 a.m., Eastern Time. (The debate will begin after the news, at approximately 8:06 a.m.)
It will be on Savannah's News/Talk station, WBMQ, 630 AM. Remember to tune to AM radio, not FM, to hear the debate.
Ray Steele of WBMQ will moderate the debate. I will be live in the studio, and Charles Kea of the CPCE, the pro-liquor organization in Effingham, will be on the telephone with us. I will be representing the Effingham Family Association.

UPDATE: The debate went well. Charles Kea made an interesting admission and an interesting evasion. He admitted that we are correct that "full-service restaurants" have located in communities that do not have liquor. Also, when I asked him to name a restuarant that has made a commitment to come to Effingham County if we approve liquor, he would not answer the question.

Friday, January 18, 2008

Pro-liquor people admit they don't know restaurant coming

The pro-liquor people made an interesting admission to a local TV reporter.
I was discussing the upcoming liquor referendum with a Savannah TV news anchor, and I said, "Why don't you ask the other people what restaurant we are voting on? The keep saying 'Vote for full-service restaurants,' so I'd like to know what restaurant they think we are voting for. Has any restaurant made a commitment to come if we vote for liquor?" The reporter replied, "I asked them that question, and they admitted that they did not know of any restaurant that had made a commitment to come."
Hmmm. Very interesting.

Saturday, January 05, 2008

The myth about "full-service restaurants"

The people promoting the February 5 liquor referendum here in Effingham County have one mantra: "Vote for full-service restaurants." They are promoting the myth that unless we allow distilled spirits, we cannot attract top-quality, national chain restaurants. It sounds reasonable, but it isn't so.
These kind of restaurants are very expensive, requiring an investment of about $1 million to open. Thus they have strict site requirements for a new franchise about population, traffic, and economic demographics in an area. If liquor were the only thing keeping chain restaurants from coming to Effingham County, then why have we not already seen a Golden Corral or Ryan's Steakhouse, which do not even sell liquor?
Liquor proponents will reply that while the restaurants require traffic and population, they also require liquor. That simply is not true. If the population is there, they will come, with or without liquor. Look at Rankin County, Mississippi, a county in several ways similar to Effingham County. Rankin County is the suburban county east of Jackson. They had two liquor referendums in the past decade and each time liquor proponents told them they had to have liquor to get good restaurants. Both times, the voters said "No." After the first vote, Applebee's opened in Rankin County. Today, they have Applebee's in two locations, Ruby Tuesdays in two locations, as well as O'Charley's, Logan's Steak House, Texas Lone Star, and several other "full-service restaurants."
Now here is the difference between Rankin County, Mississippi and Effingham County, Georgia-- Rankin County has an interstate highway, and it has 150,000 people. As Effingham County grows, we too, will see more restaurants open. Don't believe the myth that we must have liquor to get them. No, with a smaller population, what we are likely to attract with loose liquor laws is seedy bars more than nice restaurants.
The truth is, we are not voting on restaurants. We are voting on bars and liquor! Why vote for something that brings all kinds of social problems with it? Does Effingham County really want to be just like Savannah? I don't think so.
Learn more about this issue on the web page of the Effingham Family Association at www.effinghamfamily.org.