The Bay of Plenty will cap the amount of liquor outlets allowed in the area.
No more bottle stores will be allowed in the Western Bay of Plenty following strong public resistance that linked the number of liquor outlets with social harm.
It means numbers will be capped at the current 70 outlets in Tauranga and 32 in the Western Bay of Plenty District Council's
area. But drinking establishments, including 169 bars and clubs in the Western Bay, have escaped restrictions.
The two councils met yesterday to finalise an alcohol policy to guide the District Licensing Committee, which renews liquor licences and considers licence applications. This follows an earlier decision, reported on Saturday, in which they agreed to stick with 1am closing except the downtown, which stays at 3am.
The proposed bottle store cap replaced a suggestion to limit bottle stores to one per every 2868 people. The meeting ruled against introducing localised alcohol rules, despite councillor Margaret Murray-Benge calling for a sinking lid on the number of bottle stores in Te Puke, Papamoa and Greerton.
Councillor Larry Baldock supported her, saying the councils could not leave it to the District Licensing Committee. But their bid failed 9-2. The two mayors, Stuart Crosby and Ross Paterson, opposed, along with councillors Bill Faulkner, Terry Molloy, Wayne Moultrie and David Stewart (Tauranga); and Mike Pittar, Paul Thomas and Mike Williams (Western Bay).