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Gov. Wolf Signs Bill Allowing Wine Sales In Grocery Stores

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - A new law will give Pennsylvania consumers many more options about where to purchase their favorite varieties of wine.

Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf signed legislation Wednesday allowing wine sales in grocery stores and making other changes to how alcohol is sold.

The new law lets licensed groceries and restaurants sell up to four bottles of takeout wine per customer, and supporters say consumers could see bottles on sale in stores sometime this fall.

The measure also formalizes the sale of beer at convenience stores, something that has already begun as a result of court cases.

In other changes, state stores will have more flexibility about hours and pricing, and consumers can have wine shipped directly to them from private wine wholesalers.

About 14,000 holders of takeout beer licenses will be permitted to sell up to four bottles of wine to a customer. Takeout wine sales can expand to licensed restaurants, bars, hotels, supermarkets and delis.

Unions, including the one that represents state liquor store workers, have said the measure will undermine the finances of the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, leading to job losses. They are skeptical of claims it will generate about $150 million for the state treasury in the first year.

Hard liquor is not affected, and officials have said there are no plans to close any of the roughly 600 state-owned liquor stores.

The stores will get more latitude about which products to stock. Casinos will be able to sell booze 24 hours a day.

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(Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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