Dry community in southern Alberta keeps ban on alcohol sales
CBC
One of the last dry communities in Alberta will remain so thanks to outspoken residents and a motion defeated by town council.
Raymond, Alta., a prairie town about 240 kilometres southeast of Calgary, spent seven weeks engaging the public on whether restaurants in town should be allowed to serve alcohol.
The last step of that process was a town survey, made public Tuesday.
A majority of 52 per cent of the 885 respondents in the survey indicated they wanted Raymond to remain a dry community.
"I think they feel that the town has been this way for 120 years," said Raymond Mayor Jim Depew. "It's a great town, a safe community, and why introduce alcohol on that level?"
There are no restaurant liquor licences in the town of 4,100 citizens, many of them members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Council would have to amend the land use bylaw in order to allow for that.
After a brief discussion by council Tuesday evening, council voted down a motion to amend the bylaw to allow for restaurants in Raymond to have a liquor licence.
Depew said he was pleased with the resolution to the contentious community debate.
Nineteen per cent of survey respondents said they would be in favour of granting restaurant liquor licences in town, and 27 per cent said they wanted prohibition ended in Raymond altogether (two per cent were indifferent).
Coun. Kelly Jensen, who brought forward the motion to amend the land use bylaw, believes the survey results indicate a town fairly split on the issue.
"It came in very close when you take in those who totally oppose it and those who approve it on different levels," she said.
Jensen was the only one of seven council members present to vote in favour of amending the land use bylaw, despite survey results indicating a nearly evenly split population on the issue.
"There'll be disappointed people that want to have the alcohol.… I'm sure there will be," said Depew.
This most recent debate around serving alcohol was set off in town after a local restaurant owner indicated they wanted to apply to the Alberta Gaming Liquor and Cannabis commission for a liquor licence.