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THE LICENSING ACT.

The following is taken from the Wellington “ Post.” The question is of some importance, and is well worthy the attention of our readers:— At the quarterly meeting of the i Chamber of Commerce, Mr J. K. j George, in addressing the meeting, j said that the large amount invested in i hotel property in the Colour, and the | amount paid to the State in duties to carry on business, was, he thought, ; sufficient justification for calling atten- | tion to the working of the Licensing i ; Act. In Wellington city alone there j I were between fifty and silty hotels I ' and the cost of the land and buildings i I alone of these hotels would probably ' exceed £250,000, taking the average I cost of each at from £4500 to £5OOO. | The first difficulty that now occurred to hotelkeepers or licensed victuallers was in obtaining a license. Each particular licensing eommittee was sure to possess members with a fad. In | one place they would see that lamps i must be kept burning all night and i not disturbed, and in another it was

not considered necessary. Some member of committee was greatly afraid of fire risks, and hotels were alf compelled in his district to erect outside stairs to all rooms of convenient access. The papering of certain rooms did not meet with tha approval of one committee, and another had a cellar that

> ; was wrong, and this must be corrected I Another must have more bedroom: i j erected,_ or an airy room ventilated i and various other fads were made intc j a need of some forced expenditure by \ hotelkeepers, Having succeeded with ■ licensing _ committees, trouble com- | menced with the police and whenonce a ; policeman ivas offended, the future of | the licensed victualler was one of per- ; petual worry, and it was the business | of every member of the force to bring | the offender into Courr on some charge or other. A large penalty was inflicted I if spirits were sold below proof, when it was well known that certain brands are imported as much as 30 per cent below proof. If a barmaid should inadvertently enter the bar after 11 p.m. the hotelkeeper was fined. Fines were also inflicted if cards were played, if the piano was played, although it might be in a private aoom, and in one instance a fine was inflicted because a landlord was found by a policeman playing a game of bagatelle in his own parlour with a friend between 11 and 12 at night. In one case a friend of his was entering a hotel on a Sunday to booK.a seat by a coach leaving the following morning, and was followed into the house by a policeman, who, in a very insulting manner, demanded to know what he was doing there. The law was probably administered in accordance with the strict letter, bnt the effect of the law was to make every man who respected himself give up business and leave it to those who were less scrupulous The licensed victualler was a useful member of society, and contributed greatly to the comfort and convenience of the community, and more particularly to travellers. He was as much entitled of fair and proper treatment by the law as any member of the community. It was to be hoped, in the interest of those who travelled from home, that the accommodation would never be limited to the class of entertainment provided by the so-called temperance hotels. The hetelkeeper, as the law , ■was at present administered, was entirely at the mercy of every meddling policeman who walked the streets, and |

narrow-minded magistrate who ' f Upon the bench, and who appeared [ to consider his. duty more to inflict | ?unishment than administer justice, le thought licensed victuallers deserved in miny instances to be punished for the practice of refusing accommodation to travellers when rooms Were disengaged Hotels were bouud to provide lodging and refreshment, but the desire of many publicans Was limit refreshment to liquids alone. The spirit of the l icensing Act was intended to dimish drunkenness dnd its attendant evils, but the present administration had the eSect of placing the business in the hands of unscrupulous men who had nothing to lose, and so to increase the evil instead of diminishing it. Licensing committees had, he thought, proved a failure, so far certainly, Districts should be made larger, but a great improvement : would be effected by abolishing the present system of bar trade and compelling sitting accommodation to be provided, much in the manner of the French cafe. He believed if bars were made large and well Ventilated, with a chair and table provided for each customer, it would be a valuable improvement on the system of compelling thirsty men to stand at a counter to drink. They could use the hotel as a means of recreation and refreshment, as is provided in the Continental cafe system. His remarks were intended to call the attention of the Chamber to the administration of the law, in the hope that the authorities might be induced to attend more to the spirit of the law, and assist the licensed victualler in the maintenance of order, instead of wasting his time and dragging him to Court on frivolous and vexatious charges. The supervision of the hotels should be confined to a higher grade of officers, who should be allowed discretion in the matter of police prosecutions. The recent exposure of illicit distillation is a subject worthy of consideration as to whether the present duty on spirits is not so high as to offer too high a premium to the practice. Perhaps a reduction would lead to an I increase in the revenue, aud reduce the I profits of such practices to so low i a point as to make it worth nobody's while to break the law. Mr J. E. Nathan said he was glad the Chairman had referred to the Licensing Act and its administration, and | agreed with most that had fallen from him. The tendency of the Act was to ; drive all respectable men out of the j trade, and in the smaller townshins the | licensed victuallers were under the thumb of the local policeman, who had [ not as a rule the intelligence necessary i to qualify him to exercise so much i power. The local policeman could in a moment, if he chose, render a valu- I able property valueless. He would j move—“ That it is desirable that the j attention of Government Oe called at j once to the present state of the Li- I censing Act and the administration of the same, more particularly to the large power placed in the hands of I local policemen.” Mr J. C. Harris seconded the resolution, which was put ’ and carried.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PBS18821228.2.16

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Poverty Bay Standard, Volume X, Issue 1234, 28 December 1882, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,138

THE LICENSING ACT. Poverty Bay Standard, Volume X, Issue 1234, 28 December 1882, Page 2

THE LICENSING ACT. Poverty Bay Standard, Volume X, Issue 1234, 28 December 1882, Page 2

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