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New law to keep booze flowing for Dem convention

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Paul Stroup, the chief executive officer of Mecklenburg County ABC, said he lobbied a local Republican lawmaker to change the law this year so the stores could be open on the holiday. The measure will help small businesses capitalize on an important opportunity for an economic boost.

"For us, it's strictly a customer service issue," Stroup said. "Many places don't have a lot of secure storage capacity for additional spirits if we were closed for two consecutive days."

Suzi Emmerling, a spokeswoman for Charlotte in 2012, said organizers expect about 35,000 people to attend the convention, with about 1,000 events scheduled over four days. While it's hard to predict the economic impact, she said, the 2008 Democratic convention in Denver reported bringing in more than $150 million.

And that doesn't count the spillover from the event, with thousands more people expected to be filling the streets around the convention venues. Protesting the excess of Wall Street under the hot Carolina sun could be a parching endeavor.

The owners and managers of Charlotte's uptown watering holes are certainly expecting a boost in business, though some doubted that having the liquor stores open an extra day will really make much of a difference.

Jaclyn Winquist is the manager of a speakeasy-themed saloon called Prohibition about a block from the convention venue. She said she usually buys her spirits a week in advance, tripling the order if she knows a big event is coming.

Still, Winquist applauded the new legislation.

"It's always a good thing when you can have access to liquor," she said.

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Follow AP writer Michael Biesecker at http://twitter.com/mbieseck

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