Pubdate: Thu, 30 Oct 2014 Source: Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN) Copyright: 2014 The Commercial Appeal Contact: http://web.commercialappeal.com/newgo/forms/letters.htm Website: http://www.commercialappeal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/95 Authors: Esme E. Deprez and Millie Hogue, Bloomberg News Page: 9A ARK. VOTERS TO DECIDE ENTIRE STATE'S 'WET' FATE Unusual ballot issue draws broad lines, odd partnerships on Prohibition-era 'dry' option OZARK, Ark.- Arkansas liquor stores have allied with religious leaders to fight statewide legalization of alcohol sales. The stores in wet counties don't want to lose customers. The churches don't want to lose souls. A ballot issue next week asks voters whether to amend their constitution to permit sales of intoxicating liquors in all 75 counties, up from about half. Passage would further erode the shrinking swath of America, mostly in the South, clinging to vestiges of Prohibition even as cultural attitudes and waning religious influence have killed it off elsewhere. If successful, Arkansas would join states and municipalities trading in looser vice laws for tax revenue and economic activity. Colorado and Washington this year began taxing legal sales of marijuana, while New Jersey is fighting in federal court to allow betting on professional sports at racetracks and struggling Atlantic City casinos. Let Arkansas Decide, spearheading the initiative, says passage would keep local dollars in their communities, attract business and cut down on gasoline use, pollution and impaired driving. Contributions have come from out-of-state convenienceand grocery-store chains as far away as Iowa. The measure in Arkansas is unique in that it could determine the status of the entire state. Passage would force its 37 dry counties, which forbid the retail sale and manufacture of alcoholic beverages, though often with exceptions for private clubs, to allow it. The law would take effect in July. Citizens for Local Rights, the opposition group funded by alcohol retailers seeking to preserve their competitive advantage, argues the measure would lead to "beer joints and honky tonks right next to our grade schools and churches," according to its website. Most jurisdictions with booze bans still on the books are clustered in Arkansas and neighboring states, including Mississippi, Kentucky and Tennessee. Nationwide data on the precise number can be misleading: some counties that are dry are home to cities and towns that aren't, for instance. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom