Source: https://www.leg.bc.ca/content/legacy/web/40th4th/1st_read/gov27-1.htm
Timestamp: 2018-01-18 20:07:17
Document Index: 55210061

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 2', 'art 3', 'art 4', 'art 5', 'art 6', 'art 8', 'art 4', 'art 8']

Bill 27 – 2015: Liquor Control and Licensing Act
Home > Documents and Proceedings > 4th Session, 40th Parliament > Bills > Bill 27 – 2015: Liquor Control and Licensing Act
BILL 27 – 2015
Part 2 – General Manager and Employees
Part 3 – Sale and Purchase of Liquor
Part 4 – Use, Sale, Supply or Purchase of Liquor Without a Licence or Permit
Part 5 – Licences, Authorizations and Permits
Division 2 – Licences
Division 3 – Authorizations
Division 4 – Permits
Division 5 – Local Government and First Nations
38 Recommendations of local government or first nation on issue and amendment
Part 6 – Compliance and Enforcement
Division 1 – Inspection, Search and Seizure
Division 3 – Administrative Actions
48 Temporary suspension or conditions – public safety or interest
Division 1 – Miscellaneous
Division 2 – Proceedings
71 Absence of proof – liquor
Division 3 – Possession and Consumption of Liquor
Division 4 – Minors
79 Minors in establishment or liquor store
Division 5 – Regulations
80 Regulations – general
81 Regulations – general manager's role
82 Regulations – licences, permits, authorizations and endorsements
83 Regulations – fees
84 Regulations – miscellaneous
85 Regulations – administrative actions and penalties
Part 8 – Transitional and Validation Provisions, Repeal and
86 Transition – conversion
87 Transition – penalties and suspensions
88 Transition – time limit for judicial review
89 Transition – regulations
90 Transition – duty free liquor stores under Liquor Distribution Act
91 Validation – refunds
93 – 118 Consequential Amendments
119 – 120 Amendments to this Act
121 Repeal of section 118
This Bill repeals and replaces the Liquor Control and Licensing Act.
(a)	a person who holds a catering licence;
(b)	a licensee whose licence contains a catering endorsement;
(a)	in relation to a reserve as defined in the Indian Act (Canada), the council of the band that is entitled to the use of that reserve under that Act, and
(b)	in relation to an area under the jurisdiction of the first nation, a prescribed aboriginal governing body;
(a)	in relation to a regional district, the board of the regional district,
(b)	in relation to a municipality, the council of the municipality, and
(c)	in relation to a local trust area under the Islands Trust Act, the local trust committee or the executive committee acting as local trust committee for that area;
"monetary penalty" means a monetary penalty imposed under section 51 (2) (b);
(a)	an officer as defined in the Police Act, or
(b)	a member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police who is deemed to be a provincial constable under section 14 (2) (b) of the Police Act;
(a)	a building or part of it, or a manufactured home that is occupied and used by the owner, lessee or tenant solely as a private dwelling, together with the land and buildings adjacent to it that are used for the convenience, occupation and enjoyment of the occupants, or
(b)	a private guest room in a hotel, motel or other building in which private rooms are maintained for the accommodation of the public;
(a)	exchange,
(b)	offer to sell, and
(c)	give in consideration of the purchase or transfer of property or for other consideration;
2 Nothing in this Act prevents
(a)	a person who is not a minor from manufacturing wine or beer for consumption by the person or for consumption at no charge by other persons, the manufacture of which occurs
(i)	in a place other than a public place, or
(ii)	in an establishment in respect of which a licence of a prescribed class of licences is issued,
(b)	a pharmacist from preparing or dispensing a preparation containing liquor on the basis of a prescription under the Pharmacy Operations and Drug Scheduling Act, or
(c)	a medical practitioner or nurse practitioner from providing liquor or a preparation containing liquor for medical purposes if allowed to do so in the scope of practice of his or her profession.
3 (1)	The minister must appoint, under the Public Service Act, a general manager.
(2)	Subject to general policy direction given by the minister, the general manager must administer this Act and the regulations.
(3)	Without limiting other powers or duties of the general manager under this Act, the general manager is, subject to this Act and the regulations, responsible for
(a)	issuing licences and permits,
(b)	supervising licensees, permittees and the operation of establishments and event sites, and
(c)	enforcing this Act and the regulations.
4 Employees required for the purposes of this Act may be appointed under the Public Service Act.
5 The general manager may delegate, with or without conditions, one or more of the general manager's powers and duties under this Act, except the power under this section to delegate, to
(a)	an employee or other person, or
(b)	a class of employees or other persons.
(a)	if the disclosure is for the purposes of the administration of this Act,
(c)	in a proceeding before a court or a judicial or quasi-judicial tribunal,
(d)	if an enactment of British Columbia or Canada requires the disclosure,
(e)	to the person's counsel, or
(f)	to a law enforcement agency.
7 (1)	The general manager or an employee must not solicit or receive, directly or indirectly, a commission, remuneration or gift from a licensee, a permittee or a person who makes an application under this Act.
(2)	A licensee, a permittee or a person who makes an application under this Act must not, either directly or indirectly, offer to pay a commission, a profit or remuneration, or make a gift to the general manager or an employee.
8 (1)	In subsection (2), "liquor" includes ethyl alcohol.
(2)	Except as provided under this Act or the Liquor Distribution Act, a person must not, personally or otherwise,
(a)	keep liquor for sale or sell liquor,
(b)	solicit, receive or take orders for the sale or purchase of liquor, or act as agent for its sale or purchase,
(c)	manufacture liquor,
(d)	operate a facility that provides goods or services to a person manufacturing wine or beer in the facility for consumption by the person or for consumption at no charge by other persons, or
(e)	purchase or, in consideration of the sale or transfer of property or for other consideration, take liquor from another person.
(3)	A licensee or permittee must not sell or serve liquor except
(a)	liquor purchased by the licensee or permittee from the Liquor Distribution Branch,
(b)	liquor purchased or acquired by the licensee or permittee in prescribed circumstances or on prescribed conditions, or
(c)	liquor purchased by the licensee or permittee as authorized by the terms and conditions of the licensee's licence or of the permittee's permit.
Part 4 – Use, Sale, Supply or Purchase of Liquor
Without a Licence or Permit
(2)	Subject to subsection (3), a person in charge of an assisted living residence, a community care facility, a hospital or other prescribed facility may, subject to the terms and conditions, if any, imposed by the general manager,
(a)	allow liquor to be provided to a patient or resident of that institution or to a guest of the patient or resident, and
(3)	The general manager may prohibit a specified assisted living residence, community care facility, hospital or prescribed facility from doing a thing referred to in subsection (2).
10 (1)	If a substance contains liquor and also contains ingredients that make the substance unsuitable for use as a beverage, a person may, subject to this section, sell, supply, purchase or use the substance for its intended purpose without a licence or permit.
(2)	Subsection (1) does not apply to a substance referred to in that subsection that is prescribed by regulation.
(3)	A person must not sell or supply to another person, for use as an intoxicant, a substance referred to in subsection (1).
(4)	The general manager may, in accordance with the regulations, direct the manner in which a class of substance referred to in subsection (1) must be sold, distributed or kept for sale.
(5)	To determine whether a substance referred to in subsection (1) contains ingredients that make the substance unsuitable for use as a beverage, the general manager may require that a certificate of an analysis under section 70 be prepared respecting a sample of the substance.
(6)	A person must comply with a direction of the general manager under subsection (4).
(a)	the consumption, use, sale, service, purchase or manufacture of liquor without a licence or permit, by prescribed persons or entities for prescribed purposes, in prescribed circumstances, on prescribed conditions or in or at prescribed places, including, without limitation, public places, or
(b)	the use, sale, purchase or manufacture of ethyl alcohol without a licence or permit, by prescribed persons or entities, in prescribed circumstances, on prescribed conditions or for prescribed purposes.
12 An application to the general manager must
(a)	be in the form the general manager establishes for that class of application,
(b)	include the information and records prescribed in relation to that class of application, and
(c)	include other information or records that the general manager considers relevant to the application or that class of application.
13 (1)	If the general manager has a power under this Act to determine whether a person is fit and proper, the general manager may, in respect of that person, make that determination at any time the general manager considers it necessary or desirable.
(2)	Without limiting another power of the general manager under this Act to make inquiries and conduct investigations, the general manager may make inquiries and conduct investigations, including, without limitation, background investigations and criminal record checks, that the general manager considers are or may be necessary for the purposes of exercising the general manager's powers or duties under
(a)	subsection (1) and sections 18 (2), 19 (4), 24 (2) and 35 (3), and
(b)	sections 18 (2), 19 (4), 24 (2) and 35 (3) in relation to an associate of a person referred to in those sections.
14 (1)	The general manager may, on application by a person,
(a)	issue a licence of a class of licences established by the regulations, and
(b)	endorse a licence referred to in paragraph (a) with a class of endorsement established by the regulations.
(2)	The general manager may, in prescribed circumstances, refuse to accept an application for a licence or an endorsement.
(3)	If the general manager refuses to accept an application for a licence or an endorsement, or to issue a licence or issue a licence with the endorsement applied for, the general manager must give to the applicant written reasons for the decision.
15 (1)	Subject to this Act and the regulations, the general manager may, in the public interest,
(a)	impose terms and conditions on a licence or endorsement that is being or has been issued,
(b)	without prior notice, impose terms and conditions on all licences in a class of licences established by the regulations and on all endorsements in a class of endorsements established by the regulations and may impose different terms and conditions for the different classes of licences or endorsements,
(c)	establish classes of establishments and without prior notice, impose terms and conditions on all licences issued in respect of a class of establishment and all endorsements on licences issued in respect of a class of establishment and may impose different terms and conditions for different licences or endorsements issued in respect of different classes of establishments,
(d)	without prior notice, impose terms and conditions on licences or endorsements of the same class that are issued at different times,
(e)	suspend, rescind or amend the terms and conditions referred to in paragraph (a), and
(f)	without prior notice, suspend, rescind or amend the terms and conditions referred to in paragraphs (b) to (d).
(2)	Without limiting subsection (1), the general manager may impose terms and conditions respecting all matters related to the manufacture, purchase, sale, service and consumption of liquor under a licence or endorsement and the operation of establishments and service areas, including, without limitation, respecting one or more of the following:
(a)	the days and hours that a service area is allowed to be open for the sale, service or consumption of liquor;
(b)	the areas in an establishment or a service area where minors are allowed, and the circumstances under which minors are allowed to be in those areas;
(c)	games and entertainment allowed in an establishment or a service area;
(d)	reporting and record-keeping requirements of a licensee;
(e)	advertising and signs used by a licensee in relation to an establishment;
(f)	posting of signs in an establishment;
(g)	reasonable measures to ensure that the operation of an establishment does not disturb persons in the vicinity of the establishment;
(h)	the safety of employees, patrons, employees of the licensee, and the public;
(i)	the type of liquor that may be offered for sale or service;
(j)	the minimum price of liquor offered for sale or service;
(k)	liquor serving sizes;
(l)	requirements for the service of food and non-alcoholic beverages in a service area;
(m)	liquor storage;
(n)	the area in an establishment where the manufacture of liquor is allowed;
(o)	equipment;
(p)	use of an establishment during a period when the sale or service of liquor is not allowed or liquor is not being sold or served.
(a)	publish the terms and conditions referred to in subsection (1) (b) to (d), and other terms and conditions respecting a class of licences or endorsements, in whatever form the general manager believes will bring the terms and conditions to the attention of licensees, and
(b)	change a record published under paragraph (a) of this subsection to reflect suspended, rescinded or amended terms and conditions.
(4)	If terms and conditions are imposed, suspended, rescinded or amended in respect of a class of licences or endorsements, those terms and conditions as imposed, suspended, rescinded or amended take effect, in relation to the licences or endorsements in that class of licences or endorsements, on their publication in accordance with subsection (3).
16 (1)	Without limiting another power of the general manager under this Act to impose terms and conditions on a licence or to suspend, rescind or amend the terms and conditions of a licence or to amend a licence, the general manager may, on application by a licensee,
(a)	amend a licence, including, without limitation, amend the licence by endorsing the licence with a class of endorsement established by the regulations, or
(b)	amend the terms and conditions of a licence.
(2)	The general manager may, in prescribed circumstances, refuse to accept an application for an amendment to a licence or for an amendment to the terms and conditions of a licence.
(3)	If the general manager refuses to amend a licence or the terms and conditions of a licence, the general manager must give to the applicant written reasons for the decision.
18 (1)	A licensee must not allow another person to use the licensee's licence unless the licensee has first applied for and been granted an amendment to the licence to allow the use of the licence by the other person.
(2)	The general manager may determine whether the other person referred to in subsection (1) or an affiliate of the other person, or a prescribed person, is fit and proper, and, in that event, the general manager must not grant the amendment or must rescind the amendment if, in the general manager's opinion, the other person or affiliate, or the prescribed person, is not fit and proper.
(3)	If the general manager rescinds an amendment under subsection (2), the general manager must give to the applicant written reasons for the decision.
Issue, renewal, transfer or amendment
of licence prohibited
19 (1)	The general manager must not issue, renew, transfer or amend a licence if, in the general manager's opinion, it would be contrary to the public interest.
(2)	Without limiting subsection (1), the general manager must not issue, renew, transfer or amend a licence if one or more of the following apply:
(a)	the applicant or an affiliate of the applicant is a minor;
(b)	if the application relates to a licence other than a licence of a prescribed class of licences, the applicant does not own the business in respect of which the licence has been or is proposed to be issued;
(c)	if the application relates to a licence other than a licence of a prescribed class of licences, the applicant is not the owner or, subject to subsection (3), the lessee of the place or premises in respect of which the licence has been or is proposed to be issued;
(d)	the place, premises, equipment or facilities in respect of which the licence has been or is proposed to be issued does not comply with this Act, the regulations or the terms or conditions of the licence;
(e)	the applicant does not meet prescribed criteria.
(3)	The general manager must not issue or transfer a licence to a person or renew or amend a licensee's licence if the person or the licensee is a lessee of the place or premises under a lease that is not of a duration that is satisfactory to the general manager.
(4)	For the purposes of issuing, renewing, transferring or amending a licence, the general manager may determine whether an applicant, a licensee or an affiliate of the applicant or licensee, or a prescribed person, is fit and proper, and, in that event, without limiting subsection (1), the general manager must not issue, renew, transfer or amend the licence if, in the general manager's opinion, the applicant, licensee or affiliate, or the prescribed person, is not fit and proper.
(5)	Without limiting subsection (1) but subject to subsection (6), the general manager must not issue, renew, transfer or amend a licence, other than a licence of a prescribed class of licences, to or for
(a)	a person who has arranged, or agreed to arrange, with another person to sell the liquor of a manufacturer to the exclusion of the liquor of another manufacturer, or
(b)	a liquor manufacturer or the liquor manufacturer's agent, or to or for a person who is so associated with, connected with or financially interested in either of them, that the manufacturer, agent or person is likely to promote the sale of liquor of the manufacturer or for the person.
(6)	Subsection (5) does not apply in respect of a person, liquor manufacturer or liquor manufacturer's agent who is exempted under section 62 (3).
of licence may be refused
20 (1)	The general manager may refuse to issue, renew, transfer or amend a licence if the applicant fails to disclose a material fact required by the application or makes a false or misleading statement in the application.
(2)	The general manager may refuse to renew, transfer or amend a licence in respect of which
(a)	a fine, monetary penalty or suspension has been imposed under this Act if, at the date that the amendment, renewal or transfer is to take effect,
(i)	in the case of a fine, the fine has become payable under the Offence Act and has not been fully paid,
(ii)	in the case of a monetary penalty,
(A)	the monetary penalty has become payable,
(B)	the time period for payment of the monetary penalty has expired, and
(C)	the monetary penalty has not been fully paid, or
(iii)	in the case of a suspension, the suspension has taken effect and has not been fully served, or
(b)	a prescribed circumstance has occurred in respect of the licence or licensee.
21 (1)	The general manager may, on application by a person, transfer a licence.
(2)	A licensee must not purport to transfer or otherwise deal in a licence before the general manager transfers the licence.
(3)	If the general manager refuses to transfer a licence, the general manager must give to the applicant written reasons for the decision.
22 (1)	In this section, "notice date" means the date on which the general manager receives an application to transfer a licence.
(a)	a licence is the subject of an application to the general manager for transfer under section 21 (1), and
(b)	the general manager has not completed the determinations under section 19,
(3)	The proposed transferee referred to in subsection (2) is conclusively deemed, for all purposes under this Act, to be the licensee under the licence that is the subject of the transfer application, from the notice date until, subject to subsection (5), the date on which the general manager
(a)	transfers the licence, or
(b)	refuses to transfer the licence.
(4)	If, after completing the determinations under section 19 or for another reason, the general manager refuses to transfer the licence, the general manager may do one or more of the following:
(a)	suspend the licence for the period the general manager considers appropriate;
(b)	authorize a transfer of the licence, within the period the general manager specifies, to a person who is at arm's length from the proposed transferee;
(c)	cancel the licence.
(5)	If the general manager authorizes a transfer of the licence under subsection (4) (b) by the proposed transferee, the proposed transferee is conclusively deemed, for the purpose of effecting the transfer authorized by the general manager, to be the licensee under the licence that was the subject of the transfer application.
23 (1)	A licence issued under this Act expires on the date specified on the licence as the expiry date.
(2)	The general manager may, on application by a licensee, renew a licence, including a licence that has expired, provided that the renewal is within one year after the expiry date of the licence.
(3)	If the general manager refuses to renew a licence, the general manager must give to the licensee written reasons for the decision.
24 (1)	If a licensee dies or becomes bankrupt, the executor, administrator, trustee in bankruptcy or successor has the powers and obligations of the licensee.
(2)	The general manager may determine whether an executor, administrator, trustee in bankruptcy or successor, or an affiliate of any of them, is fit and proper.
25 (1)	The general manager may, on application by the licensee, issue to a licensee who holds a licence of a prescribed class of licences, or a licence with an endorsement of a prescribed class of endorsements, an authorization of a class of authorizations established by the regulations to sell or serve liquor in a service area or at an event site.
(2)	A caterer may, without an authorization, sell or serve liquor at a residential event, provided that the liquor is sold or served in accordance with
(a)	the requirements of this Act and the regulations, and
(b)	the terms and conditions of the caterer's licence.
(3)	Subject to the regulations, the general manager may determine
(a)	the circumstances in which it is appropriate, if at all, to issue an authorization in relation to specified events, places or premises, or classes of events, places or premises, and, if so, how frequently an authorization may be issued for the events, places or premises or for the classes of events, places or premises, and
(b)	how frequently an authorization may be issued to a licensee.
26 (1)	Subject to this Act and the regulations, the general manager may, in the public interest,
(a)	impose terms and conditions on an authorization that is being or has been issued,
(b)	without prior notice, impose terms and conditions on all authorizations in a class of authorizations established by the regulations and may impose different terms and conditions for the different classes of authorizations,
(c)	establish classes of event sites and without prior notice, impose terms and conditions on all authorizations issued in respect of a class of event site and may impose different terms and conditions for different classes of event sites,
(d)	suspend, rescind or amend the terms and conditions referred to in paragraph (a), and
(e)	without prior notice, suspend, rescind or amend the terms and conditions referred to in paragraphs (b) and (c).
(2)	Without limiting subsection (1), the general manager may impose terms and conditions respecting all matters related to the sale, service and consumption of liquor under an authorization and the operation of event sites and service areas, including, without limitation, respecting one or more of the following:
(b)	the areas at an event site or in a service area where minors are allowed, and the circumstances under which minors are allowed to be in those areas;
(c)	games and entertainment allowed at an event site or in a service area;
(e)	advertising and signs used by a licensee for an event;
(f)	posting of signs at an event site;
(g)	reasonable measures to ensure that the operation of an event site does not disturb persons in the vicinity of the event site;
(l)	requirements for the service of food and non-alcoholic beverages at an event site or in a service area;
(n)	limits on the ability to sell or serve liquor if the number of persons in a service area or at an event site exceeds a specified number.
(a)	publish the terms and conditions referred to in subsection (1) (b) and (c), and other terms and conditions respecting a class of authorizations, in whatever form the general manager believes will bring the terms and conditions to the attention of licensees, and
(4)	If terms and conditions are imposed, suspended, rescinded or amended in respect of a class of authorizations, those terms and conditions as imposed, suspended, rescinded or amended take effect, in relation to the authorizations in that class of authorizations, on their publication in accordance with subsection (3).
(a)	the authorization;
(b)	the authorization application;
(c)	other records related to the authorization application the general manager specifies.
28 (1)	Without limiting another power of the general manager under this Act to impose terms and conditions on an authorization or to suspend, rescind or amend the terms and conditions of an authorization, the general manager may, on application by a licensee, amend
(a)	an authorization, or
(b)	the terms and conditions of an authorization.
(2)	If the general manager refuses to amend an authorization or the terms and conditions of an authorization, the general manager must give to the applicant written reasons for the decision.
30 (1)	The general manager may, on application by a person, issue a permit of a class of permits established by the regulations.
(2)	If the general manager refuses to issue a permit, the general manager must give to the applicant written reasons for the decision.
(a)	the circumstances in which it is appropriate, if at all, to issue permits in relation to specified events, places or premises, or classes of events, places or premises, and, if so, how frequently a permit may be issued for the events, places or premises or for the classes of events, places or premises, and
(b)	how frequently a permit may be issued to a person.
31 (1)	Subject to this Act and the regulations, the general manager may, in the public interest,
(a)	without a hearing, impose terms and conditions on a permit that is being or has been issued,
(b)	impose terms and conditions on all permits to be issued in a class of permits established by the regulations and may impose different terms and conditions for the different classes of permits,
(c)	establish classes of event sites and without prior notice, impose terms and conditions on all permits issued in respect of a class of event site and may impose different terms and conditions for different classes of event sites,
(d)	without a hearing, suspend, rescind or amend the terms and conditions referred to in paragraph (a), and
(e)	suspend, rescind or amend the terms and conditions referred to in paragraphs (b) and (c).
(2)	Without limiting subsection (1), the general manager may impose terms and conditions respecting all matters related to the purchase, sale, service and consumption of liquor under a permit and the operation of event sites and service areas, including, without limitation, respecting one or more of the following:
(a)	the days and hours that a service area is allowed to be open for the sale or service of liquor;
(d)	reporting and record-keeping requirements of a permittee;
(e)	advertising and signs used by a permittee for an event;
(l)	the amount of liquor that may be sold or served;
(m)	requirements for the service of food and non-alcoholic beverages at an event site or in a service area;
(n)	liquor storage and disposal of unused liquor;
(o)	limits on the ability to sell or serve liquor if the number of persons in a service area or at an event site exceeds a specified number.
(a)	the permit;
(b)	the permit application;
(c)	other records related to the permit application that the general manager specifies.
33 (1)	In this section, "Nisga'a designate" means a person designated under paragraph 114 of the Nisga'a Government Chapter of the Nisga'a Final Agreement.
(2)	For the purposes of paragraph 114 of the Nisga'a Government Chapter of the Nisga'a Final Agreement, the general manager has the responsibility for authorizing a Nisga'a designate to issue permits of a prescribed class of permits in accordance with this Act and the regulations.
(3)	If the final agreement of a treaty first nation requires that British Columbia authorize persons designated by the treaty first nation to approve or deny applications for permits of a prescribed class of permits, the general manager has the responsibility for authorizing the persons designated by that treaty first nation for that purpose to issue permits of that class of permits in accordance with this Act and the regulations.
(4)	A person authorized by the general manager under subsection (2) or (3) to issue permits of a prescribed class of permits may send, or require a permittee to send, to a person the designate considers appropriate, a copy of one or more of the following:
(c)	other records related to the permit application that the designate specifies.
34 (1)	Without limiting another power of the general manager under this Act to impose terms and conditions on a permit or to suspend, rescind or amend the terms and conditions of a permit, the general manager may, on application by a permittee, amend
(a)	a permit, or
(b)	the terms and conditions of a permit.
(2)	If the general manager refuses to amend a permit or the terms and conditions of a permit, the general manager must give to the permittee written reasons for the decision.
of permit prohibited
35 (1)	The general manager must not issue or amend a permit if, in the general manager's opinion, it would be contrary to the public interest.
(2)	Without limiting subsection (1), the general manager must not issue or amend a permit if one or both of the following apply:
(a)	the applicant is
(i)	an individual who is a minor, or
(ii)	a company, partnership, society or other organization and the person who will be responsible for the sale or service of liquor under the permit is a minor;
(b)	the applicant does not meet prescribed criteria.
(3)	The general manager may determine whether an applicant or an affiliate of the applicant, or a prescribed person, is fit and proper, and, in that event, without limiting subsection (1), the general manager must not issue or amend a permit if, in the general manager's opinion, the applicant or affiliate, or the prescribed person, is not fit and proper.
(4)	The general manager must not transfer or renew a permit.
36 (1)	The general manager may refuse to issue or amend a permit if the applicant fails to disclose a material fact required by the application or makes a false or misleading statement in the application.
(2)	The general manager may refuse to issue or amend a permit if, at the date of the application, a fine, monetary penalty or suspension has been imposed under this Act on the applicant and,
(a)	in the case of a fine, the fine has become payable under the Offence Act and has not been fully paid,
37 A permit is valid
(a)	for the period specified on the permit, or
(b)	until the expiry date specified on the permit.
Recommendations of local government or
first nation on issue and amendment of licence
38 (1)	Subject to subsection (2), a licence of a prescribed class of licences must not be issued or amended unless, in the prescribed circumstances, the applicant has given the local government or first nation for the area in which the establishment is proposed to be located or is located notice of the application in accordance with the regulations.
(2)	A local government or first nation may indicate in writing to the general manager that it does not wish to receive notice under subsection (1) of applications or a class of applications.
(3)	A local government or first nation that receives notice under subsection (1) must, if it wishes to provide comments and recommendations under this section with respect to the application,
(a)	take into account the prescribed criteria before providing the comments and recommendations,
(b)	provide the comments and recommendations to the general manager
(i)	in accordance with the regulations, and
(ii)	within the prescribed time period, or any further period authorized by the general manager, and
(c)	in the prescribed circumstances, gather the views of residents of an area determined by the local government or first nation in respect of the application by
(i)	receiving written comments in response to a public notice of the application,
(ii)	conducting a public hearing in respect of the application,
(iii)	holding a referendum, or
(iv)	using another method the local government or first nation considers appropriate.
(4)	Subject to section 39, if the local government or first nation recommends that the licence not be issued or amended, the general manager must not issue or amend the licence.
(5)	Subject to section 39, if the local government or first nation recommends that the licence be issued or amended, the general manager must take that recommendation into account in deciding whether or not to issue or amend the licence.
39 (1)	Despite section 38, if
(a)	the general manager is satisfied that
(i)	the local government or first nation failed to comply with section 38 (3), or
(ii)	the recommendation of the local government or first nation is not in the public interest,
(b)	the local government or first nation indicates under section 38 (2) that it does not wish to receive notice of the application, or
(c)	the applicant for the licence or amendment is the local government or the first nation for the area in which the establishment is proposed to be located or is located,
(d)	the prescribed criteria referred to in section 38 (3) (a), and
(e)	in the prescribed circumstances, the views of residents of an area determined by the general manager gathered in a manner referred to in subsection (2) of this section.
(2)	In order to afford an opportunity for residents to provide their views under subsection (1), the general manager may gather the views of the residents in respect of the application by
(a)	requesting written comments in response to a public notice of the application,
(b)	conducting a public hearing in respect of the application in a manner required by the general manager, or
(c)	using another method the general manager considers appropriate.
(3)	If the general manager provides an opportunity for residents to provide their views in respect of an application, the general manager may direct that the costs incurred be paid by the applicant.
(4)	After providing an opportunity for residents to provide their views, if the general manager is of the opinion that a majority of the residents are not in favour of the application, the general manager must not issue or amend the licence.
Delegation by local government regarding
40 (1)	Despite section 154 (2) (c) of the Community Charter, a council as defined in that Act may delegate its powers and duties under section 38 (2) or (3) of this Act.
(2)	If a council referred to in subsection (1) delegates its powers and duties under section 38 (3) of this Act, an applicant whose application is the subject of delegated comments and recommendations under that section has the right to have the delegated comments and recommendations reconsidered by the council, and section 156 of the Community Charter applies as if the council had delegated a power to make a decision.
(3)	Despite section 10 of the Islands Trust Act, the trust council as defined in that Act may delegate its powers and duties under section 38 (2) or (3) of this Act.
(4)	If the trust council referred to in subsection (3) delegates its powers and duties under section 38 (3),
(a)	the trust council must, by bylaw, establish procedures for a reconsideration of delegated comments and recommendations, including how a person may apply for a reconsideration,
(b)	in undertaking a reconsideration referred to in paragraph (a) of this subsection, the trust council has the same authority as that conferred on the delegate, and
(c)	the delegate must advise the applicant whose application is the subject of the delegated comments and recommendations of the applicant's right of reconsideration.
(5)	Despite section 191 (1) (e) of the Local Government Act, a board as defined in that Act may delegate its powers and duties under section 38 (2) or (3) of this Act.
(6)	If a board referred to in subsection (5) delegates its powers and duties under section 38 (3), an applicant whose application is the subject of delegated comments and recommendations under that section has the right to have the delegated comments and recommendations reconsidered by the board, and section 194 of the Local Government Act applies as if the board had delegated a power to make a decision.
(7)	If the Council as defined in the Vancouver Charter delegates its powers and duties under section 38 (3) of this Act to make comments and recommendations,
(a)	the Council must, by bylaw, establish procedures for a reconsideration of delegated comments and recommendations, including how a person may apply for a reconsideration,
(b)	in undertaking a reconsideration referred to in paragraph (a) of this subsection, the Council has the same authority as that conferred on the delegate, and
41 (1)	A local government that provides comments and recommendations on an application for the issue or amendment of a licence under this Act may, by bylaw, impose fees on the applicant in order to recover the costs incurred by the local government in assessing the application.
(a)	different classes of applications, and
(b)	different methods used to conduct the assessment referred to in that subsection.
42 (1)	For the purposes of the administration or enforcement of this Act or the regulations, the general manager may
(a)	require a licensee or permittee to produce records that are required under this Act or by the terms and conditions of a licence or permit to be kept by the licensee or permittee,
(b)	require a person to produce records that may contain information relating to goods or liquor transported or received for transport in British Columbia,
(c)	inspect one or more of the following:
(i)	records referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b);
(ii)	an establishment or event site and the operations carried on there;
(iii)	a person's premises that are used for the storage of liquor or ethyl alcohol and the operations carried on there;
(iv)	records found in an establishment, at an event site or on the premises referred to in subparagraph (iii), which records are associated with the operation of the establishment, event site or premises or are otherwise related to the inspection,
(d)	require a licensee or permittee to provide information relating to the inspection, and
(e)	require an employee or patron of, or a person retained by, a licensee or permittee to produce identification.
(2)	The general manager may remove the records referred to in subsection (1) for the purposes of inspection or making copies or extracts.
(3)	In conducting an inspection under subsection (1), the general manager
(a)	may
(i)	take samples of liquor for testing or analysis, or
(ii)	inspect and remove for inspection, or for the purposes of testing and analysis, other things found in an establishment, at an event site or on the premises referred to in subsection (1) (c) (iii), which other things are associated with the operation of the establishment, event site or premises or are otherwise related to the inspection,
(b)	must carry, and present on request, identification in a form the general manager establishes, and
(c)	may request and receive the assistance of a peace officer.
(4)	If the general manager retains records, removes records or things or takes a liquor sample, the general manager must
(a)	give a receipt for the records or things removed or the liquor samples taken, and
(b)	return the records or things removed within a reasonable time.
(a)	must cooperate with the general manager by
(i)	allowing the general manager to immediately enter and inspect an establishment or event site,
(ii)	facilitating the inspection of a premises referred to in section 42 (1) (c) (iii), and
(iii)	promptly producing and allowing inspection and removal of the records, liquor samples and things the general manager is entitled to inspect or remove under section 42, and
(b)	must not obstruct the general manager or withhold, destroy, conceal or refuse to provide information or produce a record, liquor sample or other thing that is required by the general manager or is otherwise related to the inspection.
44 (1)	In this section, "justice" has the same meaning as in the Offence Act.
(2)	A justice who is satisfied by information on oath in the prescribed form that there are reasonable grounds to believe that there is in a vehicle, a place or premises, including premises or a part of premises occupied solely as a private dwelling,
(a)	any thing on or in respect of which an offence under this Act has been or is suspected to have been committed, or
(b)	any thing that there is reasonable grounds to believe may provide evidence of the commission of the offence
(3)	A search warrant issued under subsection (2) may be in the prescribed form.
(4)	If a licensee, permittee or person referred to in section 42 refuses to produce a record referred to in that section, a justice, on being satisfied that an inspection of the record is necessary for the administration or enforcement of this Act or the regulations, may issue a warrant authorizing a person named in the warrant or a peace officer to enter the premises specified in the warrant and to seize the record.
(5)	Despite subsection (2), if the conditions for obtaining a warrant exist and a peace officer has a reasonable belief that the delay necessary to obtain the warrant would result in the loss or destruction of evidence, the peace officer may, without a warrant,
(a)	enter and search a vehicle, place or premises, other than a private dwelling, and
(b)	seize and remove any thing that the peace officer has reasonable grounds to believe may provide evidence of the commission of an offence under this Act.
(a)	obstruct or attempt to obstruct an entry or search by a peace officer under subsection (5), or
(b)	refuse or fail to admit immediately a peace officer demanding entry under subsection (5).
45 If the general manager or a peace officer finds liquor that, in his or her opinion, is possessed or kept contrary to this Act, the Liquor Distribution Act or the regulations under either of those Acts, the general manager or peace officer may immediately seize and remove
(a)	the liquor and the packages containing it, and
(b)	records related to the liquor.
46 Without the permission of the person who made the seizure, a person must not remove, alter, destroy or deface a notice posted for the purpose of notifying the public of a seizure under section 44 or 45.
47 (1)	Liquor and the packages containing it seized under section 44 or 45 may be
(a)	retained to be dealt with under this section, or
(2)	A person may, within 30 days after the date of the seizure of liquor under section 44 or 45, give notice to the general manager to claim that the liquor seized was not possessed or kept by the person contrary to this Act, the Liquor Distribution Act or the regulations under either of those Acts.
(3)	If the general manager is satisfied of a claim under subsection (2), the general manager must, as soon as practicable after receiving notice of the claim,
(a)	in respect of liquor that is still in the custody of the general manager or a peace officer, order that the liquor be returned to the person,
(b)	in respect of liquor that has been destroyed under subsection (1) (b) by a peace officer, require the police force of which the peace officer who seized the liquor is a member to compensate the person, or
(c)	in respect of liquor that has been destroyed under subsection (1) (b) by the general manager, compensate the person.
(4)	For the purposes of subsection (3) (b) and (c), the amount of compensation is limited as follows:
(a)	if there is a retail price set for the destroyed liquor under the Liquor Distribution Act, to the lower of
(i)	the retail price, and
(ii)	if known, the actual price paid for the liquor;
(b)	if there is no retail price set for the destroyed liquor under the Liquor Distribution Act, to the lower of
(i)	the replacement value of the liquor as determined as if the liquor were available for purchase through the Liquor Distribution Branch, and
(c)	in the case of liquor manufactured or being manufactured in prescribed circumstances, to the amount established by the regulations.
(5)	Liquor and the packages containing it are forfeited to the government if
(a)	the liquor is seized under section 44 or 45 but not destroyed under subsection (1) (b) of this section, and
(i)	no person gives the notice referred to in subsection (2) of this section;
(ii)	a person who gives the notice referred to in subsection (2) of this section fails to establish the person's claim and right to possession of the liquor.
(6)	The liquor and packages forfeited to the government under subsection (5) must be destroyed or otherwise disposed of as the general manager may direct.
Temporary suspension or conditions
– public safety or interest
48 (1)	The general manager may, without a hearing, suspend all or part of a licence, an authorization or a permit for a period not exceeding 24 hours or cancel all or part of a permit or an authorization if
(a)	in the establishment the conduct of the licensee's patrons or employees is of a riotous, violent, drunken or disorderly nature,
(b)	at the event site the conduct of the persons attending the event or of the employees of the licensee or permittee is of a riotous, violent, drunken or disorderly nature, or
(c)	the safety of one or more persons in the establishment or at the event site is threatened.
(2)	The general manager may, without a hearing, suspend all or part of a licence, an authorization or a permit or impose terms and conditions on a licence, an authorization or a permit
(a)	for a period not exceeding 24 hours, if, in the general manager's opinion, it is in the public interest to do so, or
(b)	for a period not exceeding 14 days, if the general manager has reasonable grounds to believe that it is in the public interest to do so as a result of extraordinary circumstances associated with the operation of the establishment or event site.
(3)	If the general manager takes an action under subsection (1) or (2), the general manager may order
(a)	immediate removal of patrons or the licensee's employees from all or part of the establishment and closure of all or part of the establishment for a period not exceeding the period of suspension or during which the terms and conditions are imposed, or
(b)	immediate removal of all persons attending the event or the licensee's employees from all or part of the event site,
(4)	If, under subsection (2) (b), the general manager suspends all or part of a licence, an authorization or a permit or imposes terms and conditions on a licence, an authorization or a permit, the general manager must
(a)	provide the licensee or permittee with written notice of the suspension or of the imposition of terms and conditions,
(c)	set out in the notice the details of the action, including, if a suspension is imposed, the period of the suspension.
49 (1)	In the following circumstances, the general manager may, on written notice to the licensee, cancel the licensee's licence, suspend the licensee's licence for a period the general manager considers appropriate or order a transfer of the licence, within the period the general manager specifies, to a person who is at arm's length from the licensee:
(a)	a circumstance that would prevent the issue of a licence;
(b)	the licensee fails to disclose a material fact required by an application under this Act or makes a false or misleading statement in an application under this Act;
(c)	the licensee is convicted of an offence under the laws of Canada, British Columbia, a treaty first nation or the Nisga'a Nation or under the bylaws of a municipality, regional district or first nation, if the offence relates to the establishment or an event in respect of an event site or to the operation of the establishment or an event site;
(d)	the licensee fails to apply for, as required, and be granted an amendment to the licensee's licence
(i)	for the use of the licence by another person, or
(ii)	to change the location of the establishment.
(2)	If a licensee fails to report information as required by section 59 or pay a fee required to maintain the licensee's licence, the general manager may, on written notice to the licensee, suspend all or part of the licensee's licence until the report is made or the fees are paid, or cancel the licence.
(3)	If the Liquor Distribution Branch suspends or terminates an agreement with a licensee under section 5 of the Liquor Distribution Act, the general manager may, on written notice to the licensee,
(a)	suspend all or part of the licensee's licence until the agreement is reinstated, or
(b)	cancel the licensee's licence.
(4)	If a municipal, regional, provincial or federal licence, permit, registration or certificate, or a licence, permit, registration or certificate issuable by a first nation, treaty first nation or the Nisga'a Nation, that a licensee is required to hold in order to operate the establishment or an event site is not issued or is suspended, is cancelled or expires without being renewed, the general manager may, on written notice to the licensee,
(a)	suspend all or part of the licensee's licence until the other licence, permit, registration or certificate is issued, reinstated, reissued or renewed, or
(5)	If, in the general manager's opinion, a licence is dormant because a licensee has not, for a prescribed period, operated the establishment that is the subject of the licensee's licence, the general manager must, except in the prescribed circumstances, cancel the licence.
50 (1)	The general manager may cancel a permit or an authorization if, in the general manager's opinion,
(a)	a circumstance exists that would prevent the issue of a permit or an authorization,
(b)	the circumstances on the basis of which the permit or authorization was issued have changed so that the circumstances no longer meet the requirements under this Act for issue of a permit or authorization,
(c)	the permittee or licensee fails to disclose a material fact required by the application for the permit or authorization or makes a false or misleading statement in the application,
(d)	the permit or authorization was issued in error, or
(e)	the event authorized by the permit or authorization could pose a threat to public safety.
(2)	The general manager may cancel a permit
(a)	if, in the general manager's opinion,
(i)	the permittee has contravened this Act or the regulations,
(ii)	the permittee has contravened a law, relating to liquor, of Canada, British Columbia, a treaty first nation or the Nisga'a Nation or a bylaw, relating to liquor, of a municipality, regional district or first nation, or
(iii)	the permittee has failed to comply with a term or condition of the permit,
(b)	if the permittee has been convicted of an offence under a law of Canada, British Columbia, a treaty first nation or the Nisga'a Nation or under a bylaw of a municipality, regional district or first nation, if the offence relates to an event in respect of an event site or to the operation of an event site, or
(c)	if a municipal, regional, provincial or federal licence, permit, registration or certificate, or a licence, permit, registration or certificate issuable by a first nation, treaty first nation or the Nisga'a Nation, that a permittee is required to hold in order to operate an event site is not issued or is suspended, is cancelled or expires without being renewed.
51 (1)	In addition to other powers the general manager has under this Act, the general manager may take action against a licensee for one or more of the following reasons:
(a)	the licensee's contravention of this Act;
(b)	the licensee's contravention of the regulations;
(c)	the licensee's failure to comply with a term or condition imposed by the general manager.
(2)	If the general manager has the right under subsection (1) to take action against a licensee, the general manager may take one or more of the following actions:
(a)	impose terms and conditions on the licensee's licence or rescind or amend existing terms and conditions of the licence;
(b)	subject to subsection (4), impose a monetary penalty on the licensee in accordance with the prescribed schedule of monetary penalties;
(c)	subject to subsection (4), suspend all or part of the licensee's licence in accordance with the prescribed schedule of licence suspensions;
(d)	cancel all or part of the licensee's licence;
(e)	order a transfer of the licensee's licence, within the period the general manager specifies, to a person who is at arm's length from the licensee.
(3)	The general manager must, in taking action against a licensee under subsection (2), take into account
(a)	the licensee's compliance history,
(b)	the matters prescribed by regulation, and
(c)	other matters that the general manager considers relevant.
(4)	The general manager may, if the general manager is satisfied that it is in the public interest to do so,
(a)	subject to subsection (5), impose a monetary penalty under subsection (2) (b) that is greater than the amount provided for in the prescribed schedule of monetary penalties, or
(b)	suspend a licensee's licence under subsection (2) (c) for a period longer than that provided for in the prescribed schedule of licence suspensions.
(5)	The general manager may not impose a monetary penalty that is greater than the following amounts:
(a)	$50 000 for a contravention of section 8 (2) (a), (b), (c) or (d) or (3);
(b)	$25 000 for another reason referred to in subsection (1) of this section for which the general manager may take action against the licensee.
(6)	If a corporation is liable to a monetary penalty imposed under this section in respect of a contravention of this Act or the regulations or a failure to comply with a term or condition the general manager imposes, an officer, director or agent of the corporation who authorizes, allows or acquiesces in the contravention is also liable to the penalty.
(7)	If the general manager proposes to take action under subsection (1), the general manager must provide written notice to the licensee
(a)	specifying the reason under subsection (1) for which the general manager proposes to take action,
(b)	respecting the action the general manager proposes to take against the licensee, and
(c)	notifying the licensee that the licensee may, in accordance with subsection (8), waive the opportunity for a hearing.
(8)	A licensee may provide to the general manager a signed waiver, in form and content satisfactory to the general manager and within such period as the general manager considers appropriate, in which the licensee expressly and irrevocably
(a)	admits to the allegation referred to in subsection (7) (a),
(b)	accepts the action, specified in the waiver, to be taken by the general manager, which action may, but need not, be that proposed under subsection (7) (b),
(c)	waives the opportunity for a hearing, and
(d)	agrees that the finding and the actions of the general manager will form part of the compliance history of the licensee.
(9)	If the general manager makes a determination against a licensee, the general manager must, in writing to the licensee,
(a)	specify the action being taken under subsection (2), which action may, but need not, be that proposed under subsection (7) (b),
(b)	set out the reasons for taking the action, and
(c)	set out the details of the action, including,
(i)	if a monetary penalty is imposed, the amount of the penalty and the date by which the penalty must be paid, and
(ii)	if a licence suspension is imposed, the period of the suspension and the dates on which the suspension must be served.
(10)	A monetary penalty imposed under this section must be paid as follows:
(a)	within 30 days after the date on which the general manager gives written notice of the amount of the monetary penalty under subsection (9) (c) (i) or within a longer period the general manager specifies in that notice;
(b)	within 30 days after the date on which a licensee signs a waiver under subsection (8).
52 (1)	In this section, "deemed licensee" means a person who was conclusively deemed to be a licensee under section 22 (3) until the date on which the general manager refused to transfer the licence.
(2)	Without limiting section 51, that section, except subsection (2) (a) and (c) to (e) of that section, and regulations under section 85 (1) (d) apply to a former licensee and a deemed licensee, in relation to matters that occurred while the person was a licensee or was deemed under section 22 (3) to be a licensee, provided that,
(a)	in the case of a former licensee, the general manager commences action within 6 months after the former licensee ceases to be the licensee under the licence in respect of which the action is being taken, or
(b)	in the case of a deemed licensee, the general manager commences action within 6 months after the person ceases to be deemed under section 22 (3) to be a licensee under the licence in respect of which the action is being taken,
(3)	Nothing in this section limits the application of section 51 or regulations under section 85 (1) (d) to a licensee who was deemed under section 22 (3) to be a licensee and to whom the general manager transferred the licence.
(a)	a permittee, and
(b)	a former permittee following the expiry of the permit, provided that the general manager commences action against the person within 6 months after the expiry of the permit,
(c)	a licence must be read as a reference to a permit, and
(d)	a licensee must be read as a reference to a permittee or former permittee.
54 If a person on whom the general manager imposes a monetary penalty does not pay the full amount of the monetary penalty within the time specified under or in accordance with section 51 (10), the general manager may issue a certificate setting out the unpaid amount of the monetary penalty and, if issued,
(a)	the certificate is conclusive as to the unpaid amount of the monetary penalty,
(b)	that amount is a debt due to the government, and
(c)	the general manager may file the certificate with a court that has jurisdiction and, on filing, the certificate has the same force and effect, and all proceedings may be taken on it, as if it were a judgment of the court with which it is filed.
55 (1)	If the general manager imposes a monetary penalty under section 51 (2) (b) or suspends all or part of a licensee's licence or permittee's permit under section 51 (2) (c), a prosecution for an offence for contravention of the same provision of this Act or the regulations in respect of the circumstances that gave rise to the penalty or suspension may not be brought against the person.
(2)	A person who has been charged with an offence under this Act may not be subject to an action under section 51 (2) (b) or (c) for contravention of the same provision of this Act or the regulations in respect of the circumstances that gave rise to the charge.
57 (1)	A person commits an offence if the person
(a)	contravenes section 7 (1) or (2), 8 (2) or (3), 10 (3) or (6), 44 (6), 46, 60 (1), (2) or (3), 61 (2) or (4), 64 (1), 73 (1), 74 (1), 75, 76 (2), 77 (1), 78 (1), (2) or (3) or 79 (1),
(b)	contravenes section 62 (1) or (2) when not exempted under section 62 (3), or
(c)	provides false or misleading information in the following circumstances:
(i)	when making an application referred to in section 12;
(ii)	when making a report or when required and as specified by the general manager under section 59.
(2)	A person who commits an offence under subsection (1) in respect of section 8 (2) (a), (b), (c) or (d) or (3) is liable,
(a)	in the case of a corporation, to a fine of not more than $100 000,
(b)	in the case of an individual who is a licensee, to a fine of not more than $100 000 or to imprisonment for not more than 12 months, or to both, and
(c)	in the case of an individual who is not a licensee, to a fine of not more than $50 000 or to imprisonment for not more than 12 months, or to both.
(3)	A person who commits an offence under this Act, other than in respect of section 8 (2) (a), (b), (c) or (d) or (3), is liable,
(a)	in the case of a corporation, to a fine of not more than $50 000,
(b)	in the case of an individual who is a licensee, to a fine of not more than $50 000 or to imprisonment for not more than 6 months, or to both, and
(c)	in the case of an individual who is not a licensee, to a fine of not more than $10 000 or to imprisonment for not more than 6 months, or to both.
59 (1)	A licensee must, in the form established and within the time specified by the general manager, report the following:
(a)	a prescribed change respecting the licensee or the licence;
(b)	a prescribed circumstance respecting the licensee or the licence.
(2)	When required and as specified by the general manager during the term of a licence,
(a)	a licensee must provide information relating to the licensee or the licence,
(b)	the directors, officers or employees of a corporation that is a licensee must provide the names of and contact information for the directors, officers and shareholders of the corporation, and
(c)	a licensee whose licence is used by a corporation in accordance with section 18 must provide the names of and contact information for the directors, officers and shareholders of the corporation using the licence.
(3)	When required and as specified by the general manager,
(a)	a person who is or was a permittee must provide information relating to the permittee or the permit, and
(b)	the directors, officers or employees of a corporation that is or was a permittee must provide
(i)	information relating to the permit, and
(ii)	the names of and contact information for the directors, officers and shareholders of the corporation.
60 (1)	A licensee or permittee with a licence or permit of a prescribed class of licences or permits, or a person who, in accordance with section 18, uses a licence of a prescribed class of licences, must not operate an establishment or event site without first having successfully completed a prescribed training program or recertification as required by the regulations.
(2)	Unless a person has successfully completed a prescribed training program or recertification as required by the regulations, the person must not
(a)	sell or serve liquor in a service area or at a liquor store or residential event, or
(b)	supervise the sale or service of liquor in a service area or at a liquor store or residential event.
(3)	A prescribed person must successfully complete a prescribed training program or recertification as required by the regulations.
(4)	If a licensee, a permittee or a person referred to in subsection (1) or (3) is not an individual, the requirement in subsection (1) or (3) is met if the prescribed training program or recertification is successfully completed as required by the regulations by,
(a)	in the case of a licensee or of a person using the licence, an affiliate of the licensee or person or another person satisfactory to the general manager,
(b)	in the case of a permittee, the person who will be responsible for the sale or service of liquor under the permit, or
(c)	in the case of a person referred to in subsection (3), an affiliate of the person or another person satisfactory to the general manager.
Conduct at event site or in establishment,
service area or liquor store
61 (1)	In this section:
(a)	in causing death or injury to persons, whether designed for that purpose or not, or
(b)	for the purpose of threatening or intimidating a person.
(2)	A licensee or permittee or an employee of either must not
(a)	sell or serve liquor to an intoxicated person or a person showing signs of intoxication, or
(b)	allow
(i)	a person in a service area to become intoxicated,
(ii)	an intoxicated person to enter or remain in a service area,
(iii)	violent, quarrelsome, riotous or disorderly conduct in an establishment or at an event site,
(iv)	unlawful activities or conduct in an establishment or at an event site, or
(v)	a person to enter an establishment or an event site or to remain in an establishment or at an event site, if the licensee, permittee or employee knows that the person has, without lawful excuse, a knife or weapon in the person's possession.
(3)	A licensee or permittee or an employee of either may,
(a)	if he or she believes a person is intoxicated,
(i)	request that the person leave a service area, or
(ii)	forbid the person from entering a service area, and
(b)	if he or she believes the presence of a person in an establishment or at an event site is undesirable or that the person has, without lawful excuse, a knife or weapon in the person's possession,
(i)	request that the person leave the establishment or event site, or
(ii)	forbid the person from entering the establishment or event site.
(a)	remain in a service area, in an establishment or at an event site after the person is requested to leave in accordance with subsection (3),
(b)	enter a service area, an establishment or an event site within 24 hours after the time the person was requested to leave the service area, establishment or event site in accordance with subsection (3), or
(c)	without lawful excuse, the proof of which lies on the person, possess a knife or weapon in a service area, in an establishment or at an event site.
(5)	Subsections (2) to (4) apply in respect of liquor stores, and, for those purposes, a reference in those subsections to
(a)	a licensee or permittee must be read as a reference to a store manager,
(b)	an employee of either must be read as a reference to an employee of the Liquor Distribution Branch, and
(c)	an establishment must be read as a reference to a liquor store.
(6)	A peace officer may arrest, without warrant, a person contravening or suspected of contravening subsection (4).
62 (1)	A person must not arrange, or agree to arrange, with another person to sell the liquor of a manufacturer to the exclusion of the liquor of another manufacturer.
(2)	A person must not offer, give or agree to offer or give to a licensee, a permittee or an employee of either, and a licensee or permittee or an employee of either must not demand or accept or agree to accept, money, gifts, reward or remuneration, directly or indirectly, for promoting, inducing or furthering the sale of a particular kind, class or brand of liquor.
(3)	A person may be exempted from subsection (1) or (2), and a liquor manufacturer, a liquor manufacturer's agent or a person referred to in section 19 (5) may be exempted for the purposes of section 19 (5),
(a)	subject to the regulations, by the general manager, who may impose conditions on the exemption, or
(b)	by the regulations, with or without conditions.
63 (1)	The general manager may require that educational information or material respecting liquor, the responsible consumption of liquor and liquor-related issues be provided
(a)	by licensees or permittees to their patrons and employees, and
(b)	by liquor stores to their patrons and employees.
(2)	The general manager may, in making a requirement under subsection (1),
(a)	specify the information or material referred to in that subsection,
(b)	specify the manner in which the information or material referred to in that subsection must be provided, and
(c)	establish classes of liquor stores, licensees and permittees and specify different material and different manners of provision of the material for different classes of liquor stores, licensees or permittees.
(3)	A licensee or permittee must comply with a requirement under this section.
64 (1)	A person must not advertise liquor or the availability of liquor except in accordance with the regulations.
(2)	Regulations referred to in subsection (1) may adopt by reference a code, standard or rule enacted as or under a law of Canada, as amended from time to time.
67 (1)	For the purposes of a hearing, the general manager may, by summons, require a person
(a)	to attend as a witness, at a place and time set out in the summons, which time must be a reasonable time from the date of the summons, and
(b)	to bring and produce for the general manager all records or other things in the person's possession or control that are relevant to the subject matter of the hearing.
(2)	A person named in and served with a summons referred to in subsection (1) must
(a)	attend, in accordance with the summons, before the general manager and give evidence on oath or affirmation, or in another manner the general manager authorizes, that is relevant to the subject matter of the hearing, and
(b)	produce all records or other things in accordance with the summons.
(3)	When the general manager exercises a power under subsection (1), a person who fails or refuses to comply with subsection (2) is liable, on application to the Supreme Court, to be committed for contempt as if in breach of an order or judgment of the Supreme Court.
68 (1)	Documents that are required or allowed under this Act to be given or served on a person must be given or served in accordance with the regulations.
(2)	A document given or served in accordance with subsection (1) is conclusively deemed to be received, in relation to a specified method of service, as provided in the regulations.
(a)	a representative or an employee of a laboratory accredited under the Standards Council of Canada Act by the Standards Council of Canada for a purpose contemplated by this Act or the regulations;
(b)	a person or an employee or representative of an organization, agency or other entity that is satisfactory to the general manager for this purpose.
Absence of proof – liquor
71 In a proceeding under section 51 or in respect of an offence committed under this Act, the general manager or a court may, in the absence of proof to the contrary, find that a substance is liquor from the fact that a witness describes it as intoxicating or by a name commonly applied to a liquor.
72 An application for judicial review of a decision of the general manager must be commenced within 30 days after the date the general manager gives written notice of the decision.
73 (1)	A person must not consume liquor, or possess liquor in an open container, in a place other than
(a)	a residence,
(b)	a private place,
(c)	a service area in respect of which a licence, authorization or permit allows consumption,
(d)	as provided under section 11,
(e)	as provided under subsections (2) to (4) of this section,
(f)	an assisted living residence, community care facility, hospital or other prescribed facility as provided in section 9, or
(g)	in a liquor store as allowed under the Liquor Distribution Act.
(2)	Subject to subsection (3) and the regulations, a public place, or part of it, may be designated, by a bylaw of the municipality or regional district that has jurisdiction over the public place, as a place where liquor may be consumed.
(3)	A bylaw under subsection (2) must contain the hours during which liquor may be consumed.
(4)	Without limiting subsection (2), regulations under that subsection may provide that a bylaw referred to in that subsection may not designate
(a)	a specified public place, or
(b)	a specified public place for a specified period of time.
74 (1)	A person who is intoxicated must not be or remain in a public place.
(2)	A peace officer may arrest, without a warrant, a person who is intoxicated in a public place.
76 (1)	In this section, "motor vehicle" has the same meaning as in the Motor Vehicle Act, and includes an off-road vehicle within the meaning of the Off-Road Vehicle Act.
(2)	Subject to subsection (3), a person must not drive or otherwise exercise control over the operation of a motor vehicle, whether or not it is in motion, while there is liquor in the person's possession or in the motor vehicle.
(a)	if the liquor is in a container that is unopened and has an unbroken seal,
(b)	if the liquor is being transported, sold or served in accordance with the terms and conditions of a licence, authorization or permit, or
(c)	in any other case, if the liquor is not readily accessible by the driver and passengers.
77 (1)	Subject to the regulations, a person must not
(a)	sell, give or otherwise supply liquor to a minor,
(b)	possess liquor for the purposes of selling, giving or otherwise supplying the liquor to a minor, or
(c)	allow a minor to consume or possess liquor in or at a place under the person's control.
(2)	For the purposes of subsection (1) (b), possession includes a circumstance where the person knowingly has the liquor
(a)	in the possession of another person, or
(b)	in or at a place, whether or not that place belongs to or is occupied by the person.
(3)	A person does not contravene this section if the person, in reaching the conclusion that another person is not a minor,
(a)	requires that the other person produce prescribed identification, and
(b)	examines the identification and has reason to believe it is authentic.
78 (1)	A minor must not, except as provided under this Act or unless the minor does so with other lawful excuse,
(a)	purchase liquor,
(b)	consume liquor, or
(c)	possess liquor.
(2)	A minor must not, except as provided by the terms and conditions of a licence, authorization or permit or the regulations or with other lawful excuse, enter or be in a liquor store or service area.
(3)	A minor must not, for the purposes of purchasing liquor or of gaining access to a service area, present identification or another record to establish the minor's age or identity if that identification or other record
(a)	has been altered to misrepresent the age or identity of the minor,
(b)	was issued by the issuing agency to another person, or
(c)	is forged or fraudulently made.
(4)	This section, except as subsection (1) applies to the consumption of liquor, does not apply to a minor
(a)	who is employed or contracted by a municipal police board, the provincial police force or the general manager to test the compliance of a licensee, permittee or liquor store with the requirements under this Act respecting minors, and
Minors in establishment or liquor store
79 (1)	A licensee or permittee, or an employee of either of them, or a person who sells liquor in a liquor store must not allow a minor to enter or to be in the service area or liquor store if it is prohibited by the terms or conditions of the licence, authorization or permit or by the regulations.
(2)	A licensee or permittee must not employ a minor in an establishment or at an event site except as provided in the regulations.
80 (1)	The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations referred to in section 41 of the Interpretation Act.
(2)	The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations respecting one or more matters related to which the general manager may impose terms and conditions under this Act.
(3)	The authority under another provision of this Act to make regulations does not limit subsection (1) or (2).
(b)	exempting, with or without restrictions or conditions, a person, licensee or permittee from one or more provisions of the regulations;
(c)	respecting a matter for which regulations are contemplated by this Act.
(5)	A regulation under this Act may establish and provide differently for different classes of prescribed matters, including, without limitation, different classes of licences, permits, endorsements, authorizations, persons, licensees, permittees, liquors, actions, contraventions, establishments, event sites, service areas, services, training programs, recertification requirements, entities, circumstances, things or transactions or other matters for which regulations are contemplated by this Act.
Regulations – general manager's role
81 (1)	The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations as follows:
(a)	conferring additional powers and duties on the general manager;
(b)	without limiting paragraph (a), conferring a discretion on, or delegating a matter to, the general manager or the general manager appointed under the Liquor Distribution Act.
(2)	Without limiting subsection (1) (a) or (b), a regulation under this Act may allow the general manager,
(a)	for the purposes of imposing terms and conditions on a licence, endorsement, authorization or permit or on all licences in a class of licences, all endorsements in a class of endorsements, all authorizations in a class of authorizations or all permits in a class of permits established by the regulations, to restrict, limit, add to, vary or make exceptions to the regulation as the general manager considers appropriate, or
(b)	with or without restrictions or conditions, to
(i)	exempt licensees or permittees from one or more provisions of the regulations, and
(ii)	set restrictions or conditions on the exemption.
Regulations – licences, permits, authorizations
82 The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations as follows:
(a)	respecting the
(i)	issue, renewal, transfer, amendment, suspension and cancellation of licences,
(ii)	issue, amendment, suspension and cancellation of permits, and
(iii)	issue, amendment, suspension and cancellation of authorizations;
(b)	respecting endorsements, including, without limitation, the licences to which an endorsement may be added and the criteria that must be met before an endorsement may be added;
(c)	specifying licences or endorsements in respect of which an authorization may be issued and the criteria that must be met before an authorization may be issued;
(d)	without limiting paragraph (a), providing for the conversion of
(i)	a class of licence to a class of endorsement or another class of licence,
(ii)	a class of licence to a class of permit,
(iii)	a class of endorsement to a class of licence or another class of endorsement,
(iv)	a class of authorization to another class of authorization,
(v)	a class of permit to another class of permit, and
(vi)	a class of application to another class of application;
(e)	establishing requirements respecting the location of establishments or event sites;
(f)	establishing eligibility criteria for an establishment or event site;
(g)	establishing, in addition to requirements under this Act or in a licence, a permit or an authorization, requirements that must be met by a licensee or permittee;
(h)	establishing requirements of and rules relating to a licence, a permit or an authorization;
(i)	respecting consultation by the general manager or by another person with, or notice by the general manager or another person to, public authorities, including, without limitation, local governments, first nations or police, before the issue of a permit or an authorization.
(a)	respecting fees and charges payable under this Act, including, without limitation, fees payable
(i)	by licensees and applicants for licences,
(ii)	by permittees and applicants for permits,
(iii)	for training programs and recertification referred to in section 60, and
(iv)	for another service or benefit obtained or required by a person;
(b)	allowing all or a portion of the fees referred to in paragraph (a) (iii) to be collected and retained by a person who provides a training or recertification program as remuneration for the provision of the training or recertification program;
(c)	specifying when a fee or charge payable under this Act must be paid.
Regulations – miscellaneous
84 The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations as follows:
(a)	respecting the maximum number of persons allowed in an establishment, in a service area or at an event site;
(b)	respecting the consumption or possession of liquor in an establishment or at an event site;
(c)	respecting the consumption or possession of liquor by minors;
(d)	respecting training programs and recertification referred to in section 60, with power to
(i)	set training programs and recertification requirements for licensees, permittees, supervisors, servers or sellers of liquor and other prescribed persons, and
(ii)	exempt persons referred to in subparagraph (i) of this paragraph from the requirement to complete training programs or recertification;
(e)	respecting the use of establishments or service areas during a period when the service or sale of liquor is not allowed or liquor is not being served or sold;
(f)	respecting sponsorship by licensees or permittees;
(g)	respecting the holding and use of funds raised by a permittee for charitable purposes.
Regulations – administrative actions and penalties
85 (1)	The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations as follows:
(a)	respecting actions under section 51, including, without limitation, establishing rules respecting suspensions and monetary penalties;
(b)	prescribing a schedule of monetary penalties for the purposes of section 51 (2) (b);
(c)	prescribing a schedule of licence suspensions for the purposes of section 51 (2) (c);
(d)	authorizing the general manager to publish information, respecting a licensee or permittee, in relation to
(i)	actions taken under section 51 against the licensee or permittee by the general manager, including the reasons for the action and the sanction imposed by the general manager, and
(ii)	convictions of the licensee or permittee for offences under this Act, including specifying the offence and the penalty imposed;
(e)	governing the use and posting of signs to indicate that a licensee is the subject of a suspension or monetary penalty.
(2)	A regulation under subsection (1) (b) or (c), if repealing and replacing
(a)	a schedule of monetary penalties or licence suspensions, may provide that, despite its repeal, the repealed schedule of monetary penalties or licence suspensions continues to apply to a contravention of the Act or the regulations or a failure to comply with a term or condition imposed by the general manager that occurs before the date the schedule is repealed, or
(b)	a provision of a schedule of monetary penalties or licence suspensions, may provide that, despite its repeal, the repealed provision of the schedule of monetary penalties or licence suspensions continues to apply to a contravention of the Act or the regulations or a failure to comply with a term or condition imposed by the general manager that occurs before the date the provision is repealed.
Part 8 – Transitional and Validation Provisions, Repeal
Transition – conversion
86 (1)	In this section:
(2)	The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations providing for the conversion, on the coming into force of this section, of a class or category of instrument issued under the former Act to a class of instrument established under this Act.
(3)	Without limiting another power of the general manager under this Act to impose terms and conditions on an instrument or to suspend, rescind or amend terms and conditions of an instrument, a regulation under subsection (2) may specify that the terms and conditions to which a class of instrument, once converted under that subsection, is subject
(a)	are those imposed by the general manager under his or her authority under this Act on the coming into force of this section in respect of the class of instrument into which the instrument under the former Act is converted,
(b)	are, despite this Act and the regulations under this Act, those imposed immediately before the coming into force of this section under the former Act or by the general manager under his or her authority under the former Act in respect of the converted class or category of instrument, or
(c)	include, despite this Act and the regulations under this Act, prescribed terms and conditions imposed immediately before the coming into force of this section under the former Act or by the general manager under his or her authority under the former Act in respect of the converted class or category of instrument.
(4)	Without limiting subsection (2), the Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations as follows:
(a)	providing for conversion, on the coming into force of this section, of an application for a class or category of instrument under the former Act to an application for a class of instrument established under this Act, if the application is
(i)	received by the general manager before this section comes into force, and
(ii)	outstanding on the date this section comes into force;
(b)	allowing an application for a class or category of instrument under the former Act that is
(ii)	outstanding on the date this section comes into force
(5)	Without limiting another power in this Act for regulations to establish and provide differently for different classes of prescribed matters, regulations under this section may provide differently for
(a)	different classes or categories of instruments issued under the former Act, and
(b)	instruments of the same class or category issued at different times under the former Act.
Transition – penalties and suspensions
87 (1)	In this section, "former Act" means the Liquor Control and Licensing Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 267, as it read immediately before the date this section comes into force.
(2)	The schedule of monetary penalties prescribed under section 84 (2) (s) of the former Act and the schedule of licence suspensions prescribed under section 84 (2) (t) of the former Act, as those schedules read immediately before the former Act's repeal by this Act, apply for the purposes of an action taken by the general manager in respect of a matter referred to in section 20 (1) of the former Act that occurred before the repeal of section 20 (1) of the former Act.
Transition – time limit for judicial review
88 If the general manager has given written notice of a decision before the date this section comes into force, an application for judicial review of the decision must be commenced within 30 days after the date this section comes into force.
89 (1)	Despite this Act, the Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations
(2)	Without limiting subsection (1), and despite this Act, the Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations that the Lieutenant Governor in Council considers necessary or advisable for the purposes of preventing or minimizing transitional difficulties or otherwise addressing transitional matters encountered in bringing this Act into operation, including, without limitation, regulations that
(a)	disapply, vary or provide an exception to, or modification of, a provision of this Act or the regulations under this Act, or
(b)	provide for the continued application of a provision of the Liquor Control and Licensing Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 267, or the Liquor Control and Licensing Regulation, B.C. Reg. 244/2002.
(3)	A regulation under subsection (1) or (2) ceases to have effect 3 years after the date this section comes into force.
(4)	Subsections (1) to (3) are repealed 3 years after the date this section comes into force.
Transition – duty free liquor stores under
90 (1)	In this section:
(2)	The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations conclusively deeming, on a prescribed date, the following:
(a)	a party to an agreement to be a licensee who holds a licence of a specified class of licences;
(b)	despite anything in an agreement that is required to terminate the agreement, the agreement to be terminated;
(c)	an application for an agreement to be an application for a licence of a class of licences specified under paragraph (a).
(3)	Without limiting another power of the general manager under this Act to impose, suspend, rescind or amend terms and conditions, a regulation under this section may, despite anything in this Act or the regulations under this Act, do one or more of the following:
(a)	specify that a term or condition of an agreement terminated under subsection (2) (b) is a term or condition of the class of licence referred to in subsection (2) (a);
(b)	set terms and conditions of the class of licence referred to in subsection (2) (a);
(c)	apply one or more of the terms and conditions of an existing class of licence to a class of licence referred to in subsection (2) (a);
(d)	allow the general manager to do one or more of the things referred to in paragraphs (a) to (c) of this subsection in a specific case or class of cases as determined by the general manager.
Validation – refunds
91 (1)	Despite section 1 of Schedule 1 to the Liquor Control and Licensing Regulation, B.C. Reg. 244/2002, as that section read immediately before its repeal by this Act, application and licence fees that are refunded by the Liquor Control and Licensing Branch prior to the date that section is repealed by this Act, are conclusively deemed to have been validly refunded.
92	The Liquor Control and Licensing Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 267, is repealed.
93	Section 84 (2) (j) of the Liquor Control and Licensing Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 267, is amended by striking out "and" at the end of subparagraph (ii), by adding ", and" at the end of subparagraph (iii) and by adding the following subparagraph:
(iv)	to allow all or a portion of the fees referred to in subparagraph (iii) to be collected and retained by a person who provides a training or recertification program, as remuneration for provision of the program; .
94	Sections 1 (a) and (f), 20, 31 (b) and 36 of the Liquor Control and Licensing Amendment Act, 2014, S.B.C. 2014, c. 13, are repealed.
95	Sections 1 (g), 4 (g), (h) and (i), 12, 14, 27, 28 and 31 (e), (g) and (h) are repealed.
96	Sections 7 and 19 (d) are repealed.
97	Sections 23, 24, 31 (i) and 39 are repealed.
98	Section 31 (j) is repealed.
99	Section 37 (d) is repealed.
100	Section 1 of Schedule 1 to the Liquor Control and Licensing Regulation, B.C. Reg. 244/2002, is repealed.
101	Section 1 (1) of the Liquor Distribution Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 268, is amended
(a)	by repealing paragraphs (c) and (c.1) of the definition of "authorized vendor" and substituting the following:
(c)	a person to whom a licence of a prescribed class of licences is issued under the Liquor Control and Licensing Act, other than a manufacturer,
(c.1)	a person authorized under the Liquor Control and Licensing Act to sell liquor by auction with or without a permit, ,
(b)	by repealing paragraphs (c) and (c.1) of the definition of "authorized vendor" and substituting the following:
(c)	a person to whom a licence of a prescribed class of licences is issued under the Liquor Control and Licensing Act other than, subject to paragraph (c.01) of this definition, a manufacturer,
(c.01)	a manufacturer that, in its own establishment, is allowed under the Liquor Control and Licensing Act to sell and serve liquor manufactured by another manufacturer,
(c)	by repealing paragraphs (c), (c.01) and (c.1) of the definition of "authorized vendor" and substituting the following:
(d)	by repealing the definition of "establishment",
(e)	in the definition of "ethyl alcohol" by striking out "section 1 (1)" and substituting "section 1",
(f)	by repealing the definition of "licensee" and substituting the following:
"licensee" means a person who holds a licence or permit issued under the Liquor Control and Licensing Act that allows the person to sell or serve liquor; ,
(g)	in the definition of "liquor" by striking out "section 1 (1)" and substituting "section 1",
(h)	by repealing the definition of "manufacturer's agent" and substituting the following:
"manufacturer's agent" means a person who holds a licence of a prescribed class of licences under the Liquor Control and Licensing Act; , and
(i)	in the definition of "unlicensed manufacturer" by striking out "section 12 or 57 of".
102	Section 3 is repealed and the following substituted:
3 This Act does not apply to or prevent the
(a)	importation or possession of liquor for the purposes referred to in section 8 of the Importation of Intoxicating Liquors Act (Canada),
(b)	possession of liquor referred to in section 2 of the Liquor Control and Licensing Act in the circumstances referred to in that section or in accordance with a licence referred to in that section, or
(c)	possession, sale or purchase of a substance referred to in section 10 (1) of the Liquor Control and Licensing Act in the circumstances referred to in that section.
103	Section 4 (1) (a) and (a.1) is repealed.
104	Section 6 (5) (d) (ii) is amended by striking out "paragraphs (c) or (d)" and substituting "paragraph (c), (c.01) or (d)".
(a)	the consumption of liquor in a liquor store or duty free liquor store, or
(b)	the possession of an open container of liquor in a liquor store or duty free liquor store.
106	Section 11.6 is repealed and the following substituted:
(a)	the consumption of liquor in a liquor store, or
(b)	the possession of an open container of liquor in a liquor store.
107	Section 18 (3) is amended by striking out "referred to in section 8 of the Liquor Control and Licensing Act" and substituting "who is authorized under the Liquor Control and Licensing Act to purchase ethyl alcohol".
108	Section 27 (1) is amended by striking out "agent for an establishment" and substituting "a licensee's agent".
109	Section 33 is amended by striking out "or the Liquor Control and Licensing Act".
110	Sections 119, 120, 141 (a) and (c) and 150 (a), (f) and (g) of the Miscellaneous Statutes Amendment Act (No. 3), 2010, S.B.C. 2010, c. 21, are repealed.
111	Sections 129 and 150 (b) are repealed.
112	Section 30 (b) of the Miscellaneous Statutes Amendment Act (No. 2), 2012, S.B.C. 2012, c. 18, is repealed.
113	Section 1 of the Provincial Sales Tax Act, S.B.C. 2012, c. 35, is amended
"liquor permit" means a permit of a prescribed class of permits issued under the Liquor Control and Licensing Act; , and
(b)	by repealing paragraph (b.2) of the definition of "small seller" and substituting the following:
(b.2)	who does not sell liquor, other than under a liquor permit or by auction, .
114	Section 98 is amended
(a)	in subsections (1), (2), (4) and (5) by striking out "special occasion licence" wherever it appears and substituting "liquor permit",
(b)	in subsections (1) and (2) by striking out "that licence" wherever it appears and substituting "that permit",
(c)	in subsections (2) and (3) by striking out "the licence" wherever it appears and substituting "the permit", and
(d)	by repealing subsection (2) (a) and substituting the following:
(a)	declare the amount of the total proceeds expected from the sale of the liquor at the event that is the subject of the permit, and .
115	Section 182 is amended
(a)	by striking out "special occasion licence" in both places and substituting "liquor permit", and
(b)	by striking out "the licence" wherever it appears and substituting "the permit".
116	Sections 189 (1) and 190 (1) are amended by striking out "a holder of a special occasion licence" and substituting "a holder of a liquor permit".
117	Section 279A.1 (1) of the Vancouver Charter, S.B.C. 1953, c. 55, is amended
(a)	by repealing the definition of "licensed establishment" and substituting the following:
"licensed establishment" means a restaurant or a prescribed business premises for which a licence of a prescribed class of licences under the Liquor Control and Licensing Act has been issued; , and
(b)	by repealing the definition of "licensed restaurant".
118	Section 236 of the Wills, Estates and Succession Act, S.B.C. 2009, c. 13, is repealed.
119	Section 9 (1) of this Act is amended in the definition of "hospital" by striking out "or a licensed hospital as defined in section 5 (1) of that Act".
120	Section 24 of this Act is repealed and the following substituted:
24 (1)	If a licensee dies or becomes bankrupt, the executor, administrator, small estate declarant, trustee in bankruptcy or successor has the powers and obligations of the licensee.
(2)	The general manager may determine whether an executor, administrator, small estate declarant, trustee in bankruptcy or successor, or an affiliate of any of them, is fit and proper.
Repeal of section 118
121 The Lieutenant Governor in Council may, by regulation, repeal section 118 of this Act.
4 Sections 110 to 121 By regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council