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The Alcohol and Gaming Division administers New Mexico's licensing provisions, while the Special Investigations Division of the Department of Public Safety enforces the provisions of the New Mexico Liquor Control Act. [1] The Alcohol and Gaming Division also reviews applications for New Mexico Liquor Licenses, supervises the state's Alcohol ...
Alcohol server training is a form of occupational education typically provided to servers, sellers and consumers of alcohol to prevent intoxication, drunk driving and underage drinking. This training is sometimes regulated and mandated by state and local laws, predominantly in North America, and increasingly in other English-speaking countries ...
New Mexico Alcohol and Gaming Division; New Mexico Children, Youth, and Families Department; New Mexico Department of Agriculture; New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs; New Mexico Department of Energy, Minerals, and Natural Resources; New Mexico Department of Health; New Mexico Department of Military Affairs; New Mexico Department of ...
New Mexico’s leaders routinely favor the interests of those who sell alcohol. Consequentially, alcohol taxes are at their lowest rates in 30 years. Paying the tab: Increasing alcohol tax would ...
Oct. 22—Expect lawmakers to take another shot at raising the tax on alcohol in New Mexico during the 2025 legislative session. Two proposals — one that would implement a single alcohol tax ...
The LLBO was replaced by the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario in 1998 under the Alcohol and Gaming Regulation and Public Protection Act (Ontario) passed in 1996. The LLBO name lives on in many eateries and entertainment establishments which display official certification to indicate the location is legally licensed to serve alcohol.
N. Courts of New Mexico; New Mexico Alcohol and Gaming Division; New Mexico Association of Counties; New Mexico Charity Classic; New Mexico Children, Youth, and Families Department
The Senate Chamber of the New Mexico State Capitol. The New Mexico Legislature is a bicameral body made up of the 70-member New Mexico House of Representatives and the 42-member New Mexico Senate. The New Mexico Constitution limits the regular session to sixty calendar days, and every other year it is thirty days.