Scotland's ban on multi-buy deals has reduced sales according to figures from retail analysts Nielsen. Sales of wine fell 5%, spirits by 3% and beer by 8% during the first eight weeks of the ban compared to 2010. See reports from the BBC and the Herald. The ban was introduced as part of The Alcohol Scotland Act which introduced new licensing laws from 1st October 2011. Measures also include a ban of multi-buy deals, alcohol advertising restrictions, Challenge 25 scheme, and a new tax on some licence holders.
Minimum pricing, also on the cards for Scotland, is explored in a recent Economist feature 'The battle of the booze', which suggest legal challenges could await both national efforts in Scotland or local approaches in England. Scottish industry figures have been speaking out on minimum pricing as 'certainly misguided, and most probably illegal'. But the Scottish Government have said its "probably not illegal", though can only be truly tested in court once enacted.
Meanwhile a national summit to build support for minimum pricing in England will take place at Manchester town hall next year. The Association of Greater Manchester Authorities (AGMA) are drafting a bylaw to stop the sale of alcohol below 50p a unit in local shops and businesses, but want to build a 'coalition of support' for a national approach.
Trade leaders have continued to call for a cut in VAT and also called for production costs to be included in the forthcoming 'below cost ban', which the IFS recently desribed as likely to only impact 1% of off-license units. However the IFS also advised lobbying on EU legislation to allow the re-structuring of alcohol taxation over minimum pricing.
England's Government-led policies on alcohol and public health have been branded 'a joke' by the British Liver Trust. Commenting on figures showing a 74% rise in liver cancer deaths since 1997, Chief Executive Andrew Langford said there are only "weak policies or no action at all... Almost all liver disease is preventable yet we are met with a sheer resistance to tackle it." Liver disease is the only health problem out of "the big five" - cardiovascular, respiratory, circulatory and cancers - showing an increasing trend. Alison Rogers, before leaving the British Liver Trust, also spoke out saying the Responsibility Deal was "fundamental conflict of interest".
The Home Office has reported 313 Drinking Banning Orders (DBOs) have been issued on conviction since they became available to local authorities last year - see MA report. DBOs can be put in place to stop an individual convicted on an alcohol-related offence from entering licensed premises or ban them from entering pubs in a specific area. See Home Office DBO pages for more.
Five men behind a counterfeit vodka manufacturing and bottling plant in Leicestershire were sentenced to 17 years reports the MA. One in 5 off-licenses were thought to be selling counterfeit alcohol a Staffordshire sting found. Suspected criminals were arrested after they were tricked by police who lured them in with a hoax offer of free beer - The Guardian.
Liverpool's first dry bar has opened reports the Guardian. Owners say 'Brink' is a social enterprise which actively promotes itself as a 'dry bar', not simply a cafe, and will appeal to people in recovery or simply those that want to avoid the "testosterone, drunk and drug-fuelled club and bar scene". 'Violence, abuse and vomit' was the headline for a night with the 'booze bus' medics in a recent Observer feature.
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