The Elgin City Council gave preliminary approval to a plan to waive liquor license fees for bars, restaurants and similar establishments hard hit by the pandemic. Waiving the fees would cost the city approximately $57,500 in revenue.
Pawn shop owner Jimmy Pearson found dead in his riverfront home; death ruled homicide, no arrests made
Updated Mar 08, 2021;
Posted Mar 08, 2021
Detectives are investigating the death of Jimmy A. Pearson, 63, who was found dead in his riverfront home last week.
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Clackamas County sheriff’s detectives are investigating the suspicious death last week of a Milwaukie businessman who owned a chain of pawn shops, held a marijuana producer license and had been befriended by a federal prosecutor who sent him to prison in the 1990s on a drug-related crime.
Jimmy A. Pearson, 63, was found dead in his home last Wednesday morning, the Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office said Monday.
Warrensville Heights restaurant loses liquor license for 120 days after third violation since July (Source: WXIX) By Stephanie Czekalinski | February 22, 2021 at 7:06 PM EST - Updated February 23 at 4:58 AM
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) - Four establishments in Northeast Ohio were dinged by the state Liquor Control Commission earlier this month, including one who lost their license for 120 days.
The commission heard cases against liquor permit holders February 9 through the 12th.
The 157 Lounge in Kent, Floods Restaurant in Warrensville Heights, a gas station on West 117th Street, and the Velvet Dog on West 6th Street Downtown were among those establishments found to have violated the states liquor control laws, according to a commission press release.
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College friends, military vets plan to open brewery and taproom
Lincoln, Nebraska (Lincoln Journal-Star) The military scattered the friends after they graduated from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
For a time, one of them was stationed on the West Coast, another on the East Coast, the third on the Gulf Coast.
When they would talk about home, Nebraska became the Corn Coast.
“It was kind of a joke,” said Will Walter, now a Marine reservist back in Lincoln. “But it kind of caught on.”
And a few years later, when the friends decided to turn a hobby into a business, they knew what they were going to call it.