Long before Al Capone and his ilk began making millions
of dollars peddling their prohibition libations to a thirsty throng south of
the 49th Parallel, Canada had experimented with years of its own
brand of booze-banning dating back to 1875. None were really successful, as the
Northwest Mounted Police, sparse in numbers with a vast new territory to patrol,
were preoccupied with other priorities such as an influx of immigrants settling
wide open prairies, enforcing Indian treaties, quelling Metis uprisings, and
generally attempting to bring law and order to a rapidly evolving and expanding
country.
Like all prohibitions on any commodity before and since,
when there is a demand for a product, some enterprising individual is going to
find a way to supply their customer. Despite the federal alcohol prohibition,
there was no shortage of product on the Prairies. In fact, alcohol abuse was so
rampant that entire crops were not planted or harvested due to farmers being on
a drinking binge. Recognizing the utter flop in its prohibition program, the
ban was ended in 1892, eventually ceding governance of alcohol to the provinces
in 1898.
On July 01, 1916, Dominion Day (a Saturday), Alberta
began enforcing its own prohibition, three and a half years before the 18th
Amendment to the Constitution in the United States that would usher in the most
prolific growth to organized crime in that country.
Alberta’s prohibition was bedeviled from the start with
enough loopholes through which one could toss a keg. A prescription from a
doctor could get one medicinal alcohol, and beer with 2.5% alcohol by volume
was legal. Curiously, booze imported from other provinces was legal. The
criminal underworld would seize this opportunity to supply thirsty farmers and
city folk alike.
Entrepreneurial Albertans set up illegal stills in every
conceivable building – barns, garages, churches, houses, and commercial
buildings were transformed into lucrative home-based businesses. The money
flowed as easily as the booze.
The sheer failure of prohibition in Alberta came to an
end on May 10, 1924, when the provincial government began regulating the sale
of alcohol and imposing draconian rules that carried forth for seven decades
until finally turning over the public sale of alcohol to the private sector in
1993.
Alberta’s Windfall From Alcohol
According to its 2014-2015 Annual Report, the Alberta
Gaming and Liquor Commission (AGLC) nets just shy of 782 million dollars from
wholesaling alcohol throughout the province, up from just over 758 million dollars
the year prior. Contributions from alcohol and gaming operations are
contributed back to the Government of Alberta’s General Revenue Fund. In
2014-2015, alcohol’s contribution to Alberta’s General Revenue Fund was approximately
766 million dollars, up from 747 million dollars the year prior.
Worlds Away From
Prohibition
Today, AGLC offers consumers 20,105 different alcohol
products, helping Albertans consume more than 3.8 million hectolitres (1 Hectolitre
= 100 Litres) in 2014-2015. Based on population figures, AGLC data would indicate
Albertans consumed around 98 litres during that year for every man, woman, and
child.
Albertans Love
Their Beer
74.1% of all alcohol sold in Alberta was beer during
2014-2015. During the same period,
approximately 11.5% was wine, Coolers and Cider represented 7.1% and Spirits
represented 7.2%.
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