Shepard
Senior Member
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- Mar 20, 2009
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Menino's problem is he thinks he can issue permits for innovation.
LOL. Couldn't have said it better.
Menino's problem is he thinks he can issue permits for innovation.
If you paid $280,000 for a liquor license, you can’t open a 20-seat bar where cocktail nerds linger over moderately priced old-fashioneds.
http://studycenter.org/test/cce/issues/53/cce_pp8_12.pdfTHE American Liquor License Exchange, Amlex it’s called, is one of a dozen specialists nationwide in the field of liquor license brokering — the buying and selling of licenses — according to its head broker, Jon C. Mejia.
“Most of our work is in California,” Mejia said. The company is in Santa Monica. “I’d say we handle about 150 to 250 licenses a year, 10% to 15% in San Francisco.
“Since I started 22 years ago, there’ve been no new hard liquor licenses in San Francisco, either on-sale or off-sale,” Mejia said. Half a century ago the state tied the number of liquor licenses to county population. San Francisco’s is relatively stable.
“That means anyone who wants a license has to buy it on the open market.
And as for how much it costs, it’s all supply and demand.”
An on-sale license in San Francisco is $50,000 to $60,000, he said, “pretty much middle of the road for California. In Napa County, with its low population and high demand, it can go as high as $250,000.”
And California has a state law that says you can't serve alcohol after 2 AM. That law, of course, has greatly inhibited tech-related growth in California.
CA has some outstanding advantage given that it's where the tech boom began and there's still critical mass there to make the advantages for anyone outweigh the disadvantages. Meanwhile, Boston's lost its status as second-in-the-nation startup hub to NY and there's no indication the growth of startups in NY is stopping anytime soon. In Europe, the lifestyle that's popular in Berlin is driving a similar boom there despite the lack of any preexisting tech assets or infrastructure.
Silicon Valley began at a time when sprawl apologists could still keep a straight face, but there's no question young people will drive the industry going forward and will take it to places where they prefer to live.
Boston is living on borrowed time thinking that MIT plus a dated-by-decades conception of Route 128 as a tech corridor is going to mean anything in a few years' time.
From a Douthat op-ed in the NY Times on the illusion of Facebook.A glance at the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ most recent unemployment numbers bears this reality out. Despite nearly two decades of dot-com enthusiasm, the information sector is still quite small relative to other sectors of the economy; it currently has one of the nation’s higher unemployment rates; and it’s one of the few sectors where unemployment has actually risen over the last year.
Boston, which typically attracts the greatest share of graduating seniors, is once more this year’s most popular post-graduate destination, with 21.4 percent of respondents saying they will stay in Beantown next year. New York will see 19.5 percent of graduates, and 14.3 percent of seniors will head to California.
Around 17 percent of seniors will be living outside of the United States next year, with 9.1 percent headed to Europe, 4.3 percent headed to Asia, 1.9 percent headed to Africa.
My issue with Boston is this; everyone that has come past the city limits sign only sees it as a period of transition. We have some of the best institutions in the continental U.S.A., yet after that what does Boston have to offer? I am still really trying to figure that out. Our weather, minus the summer, is horrendous. The cost of living is outrageous. There are no real places for people to hangout and do things that are really neat, unless you love to walk around the streets and see the same thing everyday. One plus is the Common, yes the Boston Common, but that too gets old.
There are no real places for people to hangout and do things that are really neat...