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#1
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#2
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On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 13:23:16 -0400, iBoaterer
wrote: In article , says... On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 11:58:49 -0400, iBoaterer wrote: That is how much the state charges the lucky winner of the lottery but the number of licenses are limited and they become instantly more valuable once you own one. Depending on what county you live in and the demand the sky is the limit when you want to buy one. Typically the state requires you to actually operate under the license for a while before you can sell it, to avoid speculators. Cite? Which state? You said Florida. You can just google this yourself if you want Try cost liquor license state I did, and posted the fees for Florida. Just like that CAD program that does all of the engineering for a complex project, this is a tall tale. Yeah. |
#3
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#5
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"Urin Asshole" wrote in message
... On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 20:11:42 -0400, wrote: On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 16:03:21 -0700, Urin Asshole wrote: On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 16:18:29 -0400, wrote: On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 13:23:16 -0400, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 11:58:49 -0400, iBoaterer wrote: That is how much the state charges the lucky winner of the lottery but the number of licenses are limited and they become instantly more valuable once you own one. Depending on what county you live in and the demand the sky is the limit when you want to buy one. Typically the state requires you to actually operate under the license for a while before you can sell it, to avoid speculators. Cite? Which state? You said Florida. You can just google this yourself if you want Try cost liquor license state I did, and posted the fees for Florida. You didn't look far enough to see they only issue new licenses every 10 years after each census (if the population actually goes up) and they are doled out in a lottery. After that it is a seller's market. The average price for a license is up in 6 figures depending in which county you are talking about Only resale maybe. The license costs have already be documented, you're just trying to slime your way out of being wrong. That is the only place you can get a license unless you win it in the once a decade lottery. Which has nothing to do with getting a license from the state. Something you're trying to claim you never said. Well, as usual, you talk in generalities with no justification. It's like claiming that it costs hundreds of dollars to pay a round of golf. Well, yeah, if you including buying clubs. The license is a couple of grand maybe, depending on the type. Then when you get it you'll have an investment opportunity. Try making some sense next time. ========================== Depending on the county in California that couple of grand could be 100 grand. About 45 years ago, friend ran a liquor store in Concord, CA. He and wife had a great week. Went to Las Vegas and came back with a $1000 more than they left town with after all expenses, and they both entered the liquor license lotto. Both got drawn. At that time the lotto was about $200 to enter and I think the license was about $5000. You had to run the new store for a year before the license could be transferred to someone else. At that time a license in Contra Costa County sold for about $100,000, plus the store stock. I think there was about a 2% chance of winning in the lotto. That is the real cost of a license, not the state sold cost, which is near impossible to get. San Francisco licenses are actually cheap, and you can not transfer out of county. They are issued per number of residents and during WW2 SF had a huge population, so lots of licenses were issued. Much smaller population now, but number of licenses does not decrease. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 22 Mar 2013 07:27:03 -0700, "Califbill"
wrote: "Urin Asshole" wrote in message .. . On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 20:11:42 -0400, wrote: On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 16:03:21 -0700, Urin Asshole wrote: On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 16:18:29 -0400, wrote: On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 13:23:16 -0400, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 11:58:49 -0400, iBoaterer wrote: That is how much the state charges the lucky winner of the lottery but the number of licenses are limited and they become instantly more valuable once you own one. Depending on what county you live in and the demand the sky is the limit when you want to buy one. Typically the state requires you to actually operate under the license for a while before you can sell it, to avoid speculators. Cite? Which state? You said Florida. You can just google this yourself if you want Try cost liquor license state I did, and posted the fees for Florida. You didn't look far enough to see they only issue new licenses every 10 years after each census (if the population actually goes up) and they are doled out in a lottery. After that it is a seller's market. The average price for a license is up in 6 figures depending in which county you are talking about Only resale maybe. The license costs have already be documented, you're just trying to slime your way out of being wrong. That is the only place you can get a license unless you win it in the once a decade lottery. Which has nothing to do with getting a license from the state. Something you're trying to claim you never said. Well, as usual, you talk in generalities with no justification. It's like claiming that it costs hundreds of dollars to pay a round of golf. Well, yeah, if you including buying clubs. The license is a couple of grand maybe, depending on the type. Then when you get it you'll have an investment opportunity. Try making some sense next time. ========================== Depending on the county in California that couple of grand could be 100 grand. About 45 years ago, friend ran a liquor store in Concord, CA. He and wife had a great week. Went to Las Vegas and came back with a $1000 more than they left town with after all expenses, and they both entered the liquor license lotto. Both got drawn. At that time the lotto was about $200 to enter and I think the license was about $5000. You had to run the new store for a year before the license could be transferred to someone else. At that time a license in Contra Costa County sold for about $100,000, plus the store stock. I think there was about a 2% chance of winning in the lotto. That is the real cost of a license, not the state sold cost, which is near impossible to get. San Francisco licenses are actually cheap, and you can not transfer out of county. They are issued per number of residents and during WW2 SF had a huge population, so lots of licenses were issued. Much smaller population now, but number of licenses does not decrease. Nope. Not true. The cost is the Fed, state, and local fees and doesn't add up to 100K. A few thousand.. that's it. Private sales are different, but that has nothing to do with getting a license. I love you're quoting something from 45 years ago... like that has any relevence. It's like saying the real cost of getting a license plate sticker includes the price of the car. Complete bs. You and Gretwel should get a room. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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"Urin Asshole" wrote in message
... On Fri, 22 Mar 2013 07:27:03 -0700, "Califbill" wrote: "Urin Asshole" wrote in message .. . On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 20:11:42 -0400, wrote: On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 16:03:21 -0700, Urin Asshole wrote: On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 16:18:29 -0400, wrote: On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 13:23:16 -0400, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 11:58:49 -0400, iBoaterer wrote: That is how much the state charges the lucky winner of the lottery but the number of licenses are limited and they become instantly more valuable once you own one. Depending on what county you live in and the demand the sky is the limit when you want to buy one. Typically the state requires you to actually operate under the license for a while before you can sell it, to avoid speculators. Cite? Which state? You said Florida. You can just google this yourself if you want Try cost liquor license state I did, and posted the fees for Florida. You didn't look far enough to see they only issue new licenses every 10 years after each census (if the population actually goes up) and they are doled out in a lottery. After that it is a seller's market. The average price for a license is up in 6 figures depending in which county you are talking about Only resale maybe. The license costs have already be documented, you're just trying to slime your way out of being wrong. That is the only place you can get a license unless you win it in the once a decade lottery. Which has nothing to do with getting a license from the state. Something you're trying to claim you never said. Well, as usual, you talk in generalities with no justification. It's like claiming that it costs hundreds of dollars to pay a round of golf. Well, yeah, if you including buying clubs. The license is a couple of grand maybe, depending on the type. Then when you get it you'll have an investment opportunity. Try making some sense next time. ========================== Depending on the county in California that couple of grand could be 100 grand. About 45 years ago, friend ran a liquor store in Concord, CA. He and wife had a great week. Went to Las Vegas and came back with a $1000 more than they left town with after all expenses, and they both entered the liquor license lotto. Both got drawn. At that time the lotto was about $200 to enter and I think the license was about $5000. You had to run the new store for a year before the license could be transferred to someone else. At that time a license in Contra Costa County sold for about $100,000, plus the store stock. I think there was about a 2% chance of winning in the lotto. That is the real cost of a license, not the state sold cost, which is near impossible to get. San Francisco licenses are actually cheap, and you can not transfer out of county. They are issued per number of residents and during WW2 SF had a huge population, so lots of licenses were issued. Much smaller population now, but number of licenses does not decrease. Nope. Not true. The cost is the Fed, state, and local fees and doesn't add up to 100K. A few thousand.. that's it. Private sales are different, but that has nothing to do with getting a license. I love you're quoting something from 45 years ago... like that has any relevence. It's like saying the real cost of getting a license plate sticker includes the price of the car. Complete bs. You and Gretwel should get a room. ------------------------ Well ****head, how do you get a license when the state is not selling them, and only a few get raffled off every 10 years? You pay the going rate which is not the state price, it is the private sale rate! |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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In article ,
says... On Fri, 22 Mar 2013 07:27:03 -0700, "Califbill" wrote: "Urin Asshole" wrote in message .. . On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 20:11:42 -0400, wrote: On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 16:03:21 -0700, Urin Asshole wrote: On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 16:18:29 -0400, wrote: On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 13:23:16 -0400, iBoaterer wrote: In article , says... On Thu, 21 Mar 2013 11:58:49 -0400, iBoaterer wrote: That is how much the state charges the lucky winner of the lottery but the number of licenses are limited and they become instantly more valuable once you own one. Depending on what county you live in and the demand the sky is the limit when you want to buy one. Typically the state requires you to actually operate under the license for a while before you can sell it, to avoid speculators. Cite? Which state? You said Florida. You can just google this yourself if you want Try cost liquor license state I did, and posted the fees for Florida. You didn't look far enough to see they only issue new licenses every 10 years after each census (if the population actually goes up) and they are doled out in a lottery. After that it is a seller's market. The average price for a license is up in 6 figures depending in which county you are talking about Only resale maybe. The license costs have already be documented, you're just trying to slime your way out of being wrong. That is the only place you can get a license unless you win it in the once a decade lottery. Which has nothing to do with getting a license from the state. Something you're trying to claim you never said. Well, as usual, you talk in generalities with no justification. It's like claiming that it costs hundreds of dollars to pay a round of golf. Well, yeah, if you including buying clubs. The license is a couple of grand maybe, depending on the type. Then when you get it you'll have an investment opportunity. Try making some sense next time. ========================== Depending on the county in California that couple of grand could be 100 grand. About 45 years ago, friend ran a liquor store in Concord, CA. He and wife had a great week. Went to Las Vegas and came back with a $1000 more than they left town with after all expenses, and they both entered the liquor license lotto. Both got drawn. At that time the lotto was about $200 to enter and I think the license was about $5000. You had to run the new store for a year before the license could be transferred to someone else. At that time a license in Contra Costa County sold for about $100,000, plus the store stock. I think there was about a 2% chance of winning in the lotto. That is the real cost of a license, not the state sold cost, which is near impossible to get. San Francisco licenses are actually cheap, and you can not transfer out of county. They are issued per number of residents and during WW2 SF had a huge population, so lots of licenses were issued. Much smaller population now, but number of licenses does not decrease. Nope. Not true. The cost is the Fed, state, and local fees and doesn't add up to 100K. A few thousand.. that's it. Private sales are different, but that has nothing to do with getting a license. I love you're quoting something from 45 years ago... like that has any relevence. It's like saying the real cost of getting a license plate sticker includes the price of the car. Complete bs. You and Gretwel should get a room. Well that's pure horse**** that he wrote anyway. In CA every grocery store sells liquor. No need for liquor stores. |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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In article ,
says... On Fri, 22 Mar 2013 11:11:23 -0700, Urin Asshole wrote: Nope. Not true. The cost is the Fed, state, and local fees and doesn't add up to 100K. A few thousand.. that's it. Private sales are different, but that has nothing to do with getting a license. They have a quota on those licenses and they are mostly sold in the private markets. I have already pointed out that occasionally the state ups the quota and you can get in the lottery for one but that is literally a crap shoot. http://www.florida-liquorlicense.com/html/faqs.html |
#10
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