Walmart Stores Get CCTV-Enabled, Breathalyzin' Wine Vending Machines
Select Pennsylvania Walmarts have found a way to work around the law prohibiting alcohol sales in grocery stores. It turns out the shortsighted legislature forgot to make it illegal to sell wine from a vending machine: "as long as the user is asked to take a breathalyzer test, swipe their state issued ID or Driver License, and then show their mug to a state official sitting somewhere in Harrisburg, who is keeping an eye on the proceedings via CCTV." I'm surprised nobody thought of this sooner.
I'm surprised nobody thought of this sooner.
In Japan they do something like this already.
Sorry Dave. I can't let you drink that.
If you're going to mock the average Wal-Mart shopper as a redneck, at least go all the way.
How does it feel to be a liar with pants constantly on fire?
That liquor control board's antiquated database can be accessed only using an old IE6 client. So that little terminal shown on the right is actually Linux machine running IE6 under WINE :-)
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
I dunno, why not lobby against such laws so they can legally sell it like everyone else does instead of making someone jump through hoops. A breathalyzer test for buying alcohol? What exactly does this mean? What happens if you fail? Do the records get stored somewhere attached to your drivers license ID and if you fail do you get arrested as it notifies the local police that you're probably drunk driving home?
Turns out, Kirin wasn't a cola - it's a beer. Big signs, written in Japanese, said something to the effect "If you are under 21, please don't buy from this machine." No cameras, no ID swipe. Trust. Apparently, they could trust a 16-year-old to not buy something that was not allowed to them, or at least not to be stupid about it.
I'm from Pennsylvania. Sales of wine and liquor are highly regulated by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board (PLCB). The places in the state that can sell liquor are state-run stores. Wal-Mart in Pennsylvania can't sell beer, same thing with convenience stores. The idea to sell wine from vending machines in grocery stores is not a really new idea, nor was it the idea of the retailers. The state actually approved of the wine vending machines, in response to many consumers wishing that they could at least purchase some wine while buying food. This isn't really a forward-thinking idea, actually. If we were really in the 21st century, Pennsylvanians would be able to buy wine and beer right at Wal-Mart and other places right off the shelves, and the cashiers can check IDs. I've seen the wine vending machines, they actually came out a few months ago in some other grocery stores. I don't like them because the machine only stocks a few varieties of the most popular wine. Not nearly the selection one would find at a "state store" or the even bigger selection one would find if he felt so inclined as to cross the border. As a side note, I live close to the border. In my town, due to the state's arcane laws, there is no place to buy beer after 8:00 PM - unless one goes to the bar and buys carryout by the six packs. So we've been known to make beer runs to a neighboring state, where there is a convenience store that sells by the case, just a few miles from the state line. I haven't actually used the new wine vending machines, but I know some who have, and they complain that it's not that fun, sometimes there are some issues, and last I knew, there was only one employee at the remote location that verifies the IDs. So, there is some waiting, and sometimes some issues with reading the cards. YMMV. Anyways, even though it seems cool, and *OMG YAY technology!* It isn't really a step in the right direction, as far as my state's arcane laws are concerned.
as long as the user is asked to take a breathalyzer test, swipe their state issued ID or Driver License, and then show their mug to a state official sitting somewhere in Harrisburg
Surprised? Really? That no one proposed making a machine with a live video feed monitored by a government agent, that required an ID swipe and a payment swipe, and best of all required you to put your lips on some sort of breathalyzer that has no doubt been kissed by many a wineo before you? Yeah I gotta hand it to them, they built a better mousetrap. I can see the customers swarming in from here, and I live in Ohio.
The reason why they can do this easily in Japan is that while you have to be 18 (I think) to buy alcohol, they don't really care. Also, as far as I can tell, there are no rules against selling alcohol to intoxicated persons, or against drinking it on the street. Believe it or not, in most of the USA, it is illegal to drink outdoors in urban areas. Some areas, mostly in Utah, the Deep South, or areas with large Native American populations, ban the sale of alcohol altogether. In contrast, I remember in Japan walking back to my room in a traditional-style inn, and seeing parents from the wedding downstairs out in the garden with twin boys, apparently around 14 or 15, and one of them was throwing up from drinking too much.
There is a huge entrenched interest in keeping the state store monopoly in place, despite that fact that everyone but the state employees/beer distributers hate the system.
If you live around Philly, you just route around the problem by driving to NJ/DE.
This is Slashdot:
Walmart = Bad.
Japan = Good.
Don't make us have to think...
...it's called New Jersey.
Liquor laws are written by the distributors themselves. They want things this ridiculous to keep out competition. The city of chicago has 1, count them, 1 distributer for the entire city. It is virtually impossible to get a distribution license in the city, and is why Chicago has such pour variety in beers despite being so close to Wisconsin.
Oh SNAP the government really CAN spur innovation! No one would have ever built this machine without the government of PA. How can we thank you!?
To get fireworks and cheeper smokes. I never understood how PA can sell fireworks.. to out of state patrons, however people of PA cannot buy them?
have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
With all the BigBrother stuff happening recently, i wouldn't do it. I wouldn't want rev 2.0 taking cell cultures from my saliva and adding to a DNA database.
Walmart isnt the only store that is getting around the laws here in PA regarding the sales of alcohol. Wegman's has long been getting around the issue by sectioning off an area of their store and basically turning it into a restaurant with a bar and all. It is still connected to the main building and you can access the restaurant area without leaving the building, but you cannot bring your groceries in there without paying for them. They don't sell hard liquor, but they are able to sell anything from single bottles all the way up to cases of bear and bottles of wine. One really cool thing they allow you to do there is to create your own 6-pack, where you can select from a wide variety of bottles and just pick whatever you want. This is very nice for those people that just really don't know what they want or just want to try a variety of different beers.
Walmart is just taking a route that is a bit less expensive to start, but not nearly as expandable as the idea wegman's uses.
Of course, I buy my booze days in advance from The wine Library.
Then again, you never know when you're suddenly going to get descended upon by a horde of thirsty barbarians in football helmets and have to run out and buy hooch to save your life, sanity &| virginity .
MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
Pennsylvania has some really fucked up booze laws.
Somehow, I kind of wish they could do more to enforce the prohibition on drinking on election days. Well, at least for the people who vote....
This is not a "hack" or "workaround" by Walmart or others (Wegman's, etc.). The PA Liquor Control Board is a knowing partner in this venture. If anything it's them who's using a workaround here. The legislature won't liberalize the law, so the PLCB used the "loophole" created by the fact that the law didn't prohibit this means of selling wine. The real question is whether the public will tolerate the pain of waiting to blow into the breathalizer every time they buy an overpriced bottle of wine. As a long-time PA resident, I find the process painful (my wife and I walked away from one of the machines when a person in line in front of us had to keep resetting their selection to get to the breath test because the sensor could not pick up her breath well enough to pass or fail her). We went to a regular PLCB Wine store a short distance away and got in and out with a bottle of wine in five minutes.
Jay Mumper
It turns out the shortsighted legislature forgot to make it illegal to sell wine from a vending machine: "as long as the user is asked to take a breathalyzer test, swipe their state issued ID or Driver License, and then show their mug to a state official sitting somewhere in Harrisburg, who is keeping an eye on the proceedings via CCTV." I'm surprised nobody thought of this sooner.
The system was developed by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, who runs the "State Store" system. The machines are run by the LCB. This isn't some magic end-around the law, it was developed by the exact people the legislature has designated to decide how to sell wine in the state.
Also, Wal-Mart is not the first to have the machines. There has been one in my local grocery store (Giant Eagle) outside of Pittsburgh, PA for a while now. They've also had single bottles and 6-packs of beer available for even longer. (Beer sales are generally limited to "distributors" who can only sell full cases, or bars/restaurants/delis who can sell single bottles or 6-packs. Giant Eagle sells ready-to-eat food in that part of the store, so they were able to get a deli-style license for beer sales.)
The wine vending machines are stupid. The selection is very limited, and the machines only operate during the same hours that the state-run Liquor/Wine stores are open anyway. Given that I have to drive past a state Liquor store to get to the store with the wine vending machine, it's pointless. I just make the extra stop.
The beer section is decent, but single bottles/6-packs are overpriced. I just go to a beer store and buy a case.
At least all of this is a step in the right direction. Maybe someday they will actually allow grocery stores to really sell alcohol like other states. I'm not holding my breath, though.
apparently though, the current legislature is considering selling off the state stores to help cover budget shortfalls. I doubt it will happen, but deregulating wine sales would obsolete these machines overnight
I live in Europe and I simply cannot imagine this kind of stuff working here. Brethalyzer, mugshot, ID swipe... for buying alcohol... by adult... seriously WTF?
Pennsylvania has some really fucked up booze laws.
That, and it seems like they hire a bunch of Prohibitionists to run the state-run liquor stores that you need to go to in order to even buy wine.
Similar to the upcoming US election results
I can't believe I am apparently the only commenter (??? at least thus far) who is shocked that people don't think about that they are not being "carded", they are being RECORDED. It is not at all like being carded, where someone LOOKS at your ID to make sure you are of age and then you can purchase anonymously. Instead, there will be PROOF POSITIVE of who you are (name, address, etc), your magic number, your photograph, where you were and what date/time, and even your blood alcohol... tied to what you are buying. Plus, one could swap the guts of the machine in the "breathalyser" and test for anything else they care to look for. And all this data is being stored in a database.... one that, no doubt, we will have no idea what it is being used for now or in the future. Computers don't "forget". I think this is a HORRIBLE blow to privacy and civil liberties and if accepted, will open the door to more and more such stuff.
Here in AZ, all kinds of stores sell hard liquor, stocked in bottles out on open shelves. Even Wal-Mart. I can't think of a grocery store or even a gas station that doesn't sell liquor, and by liquor I mean hard liquor, not beer and wine. Sure, they are generally strict about carding and whatnot, but the idea that it would be under lock and key for any purpose aside from loss prevention really surprises me, and the idea of a CCTV monitor bothers me a whole lot more. Also the card swipe. I would very much like for this kind of purchase to be anonymous, as far as the state is concerned. I suppose it's ok for the clerk to check my ID, but not to record it.
-fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
nuff said. oh, well a bit more, read this about sampling whole cities at-once for drugs, and what the parent just said doesn't sound paranoid at all. I do not want to submit to a complete chemical search of my exhalations as part of a routine commerical interaction. Isn't this what HIPPA and it's privacy laws are meant to *prevent*??
CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/07/090715160823.htm
CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
in Canada it's 18 in parts and 19 in others
... that will dispense condoms, but you'll be required to submit a DNA sample to use it.
You should move to South Louisiana, where they sell beer/wine/liquor in drug stores.
"I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
They do that in Chicago and California as well, but the real treat in S LA is the drive through daiquiri shops =)
There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
Sadly, all the fun was taken away by Open Container laws
"I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
Oh no thank you. Even if I do live in Philadelphia with it's arcane liquor laws, I'd rather not be in New Jersey.
No kidding! I live in PA and it is a real PITA for a responsible adult to pick up an adult beverage. Now let's look at the bigger picture, has it done anything to curb underage drinking, or drinking in excess? From my own personal experiences in the past that would be a big resounding NO! All the policies that are in place only serve to inconvenience those who seek to legally obtain alcohol. Hell, when I was 16 it was easier to get booze. All you had to do was show up at that one certain friend's house.... everyone had one of those friends.
To get fireworks and cheeper smokes. I never understood how PA can sell fireworks.. to out of state patrons, however people of PA cannot buy them?
Makes a lot of sense doesn't it? That's my state for you!
I have seen such vending machine in Prague near botanical garden around 4 years ago! I slipped my ID and got chance to have e beer from it. :)
Pennsylvania's Liquor Control Board had to authorize the use of these machines. Curiously, they are the product of someone with close ties to LCB officials. But as long as they stick to recognized brand name wines -- Ripple, Boone's Farm, etc. -- the WalMart shoppers won't have their horizons expanded anyway.
Red and white wine, sherry, and bourbon are very common cooking ingredients. These people have now made it necessary to go to a liquor store to get cooking supplies. If their intention was to cut down on exposure to alcohol, they've not done it for anyone who is a serious hobby cook.
Anyone know if they exempted the "cooking wines" specifically salted to make them unpleasant to drink? In some states you don't even have to be legal drinking age to buy those.
...tell that to Pittsburgh.
This isn't really "new" stores have had this for a while now. It was even featured on Modern Marvels
Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once
http://www.wineoftheweek.co.uk/2010/08/06/vending-machines-pending-in-pennsylvania/
Surprised it took you this long to report on it - story from August....