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The Alcohol and Tobacco Tax Bureau is a Maryland state government agency responsible for monitoring the manufacture, storage, transportation, sale and distribution of alcoholic beverages and tobacco. collecting state taxes on beer, wine, distilled spirits, cigarettes and other tobacco products. issuing licenses and permits.
The Maryland Department of Labor (called the Department of Labor, Licensing, and Regulation until 2019 [1]) is a government agency in the U.S. state of Maryland. [2] It is headquartered at 1100 North Eutaw Street in Baltimore .
A Maryland law passed in 1978 prohibited chain and discount stores from having alcohol licenses. The same law said that only a Maryland resident could have an alcohol license and that each person could only have one alcohol license. [9] [10] The chain-store law was enacted in the early 1980s after a push from small, local retail businesses.
The current Comptroller of Maryland is Brooke Lierman (D), currently serving her term (2023–present). [2] The comptroller appoints two deputy comptrollers and a chief of staff. [3] The Field Enforcement Unit (FEU) is the enforcement arm of the office. The FEU employs state agents, who are fully certified police officers, comparable to IRS agents.
The board was established by the Maryland Constitution of 1864, replacing the Commissioners of Public Works and various other boards. [1] The board acts as a check on the power of the General Assembly [2] and also guarantees "that significant State expenditures are necessary and appropriate, fiscally responsible, fair, and lawful" and that "executive decisions are made responsibly and ...
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Medical boards license physicians, investigate complaints, discipline those who violate the law, conduct physician evaluations, and facilitate the rehabilitation of physicians where appropriate. The FSMB's mission calls for "continual improvement in the quality, safety and integrity of health care through the development and promotion of high ...
In 1967 Kathryn Kusner applied for a jockey license through the commission but was denied because she was a woman. [1] However, in 1968 Judge Ernest A. Loveless of the Circuit Court of Prince Georges County ordered her to be granted the license. [2] Kusner thus became the first licensed female jockey in the United States. [1]