Click image to view
By James Roxbury
Wednesday March 05, 2014 at 12:08 pm

Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board aapproved the first Pa Tavern Gaming License to SNZ, INC. also known as Midway Tavern 317 Third Street Hanover Pa.

The vote to approve.

Barry and Ronda Zeigler, Midway Tavern.

Press Release from the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board.

Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board Approves First Tavern Gaming License in the Commonwealth.

Restaurant in Conewago Township, Adams County, first to be granted new license Harrisburg – At its semimonthly meeting, the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board today voted to approve the first Tavern Gaming License for SNZ, Inc., also known as Midway Tavern, 317 Third St., Hanover, 17331.

“We are pleased to be able to approve the first Tavern Gaming License,” said Joseph E. Brion, PLCB Chairman. “We understand the significance of these new licenses, and will continue to process each application as thoroughly and as quickly as possible.”

To receive the Tavern Gaming License, officials from SNZ, Inc., must pay a legislatively mandated $2,000 fee before the license is issued and certain small games of chance – pull-tabs, daily drawings and charitable raffles – can be offered.

The Hanover-based business has held a Restaurant liquor license since June 19, 1990. As required by law, Tavern Gaming License applications became available on Jan. 27, 2014. To date, the PLCB has received 10 Tavern Gaming License applications.

While the PLCB processes the applications and ultimately approves or denies the licenses, other state agencies have a role in tavern gaming as well. The Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board conducts thorough background checks on applicants and provides that information to the PLCB. The Department of Revenue collects the applicable taxes and administers filing and payment obligations related to taverns, as well as the annual reporting requirements of the law. The State Police Bureau of Liquor Control Enforcement enforces the licensing and gaming requirements of the new law while maintaining its current responsibilities enforcing the Liquor Code.

Tavern Gaming Licenses were created by Act 90 of 2013, which was signed into law on Nov. 27, 2013. In mid-January, informational seminars for licensees and interested parties were held at seven locations across Pennsylvania. More than 1,700 people attended.

Sign Up or Log In to comment.