Two men filed ballot initiatives today for 2026ย and 2028ย that would allow grocers to sell hard liquor.
It is unclear who the chief petitioners, David John Allison and Kyle LoCascio, both of Portland, represent. Neither immediately responded to phone calls.
With small exceptions, the right to sell hard liquor at the retail level currently belongs exclusively to the Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission.
Grocers, who earn thin margins on the sale of perishable food items, have long sought to sell hard liquor alongside the beer and wine they already offer.
The Northwest Grocery Retail Association pushed a partial privatization measure this legislative session, House Bill 3730, which would allow them to sell cocktails in a can, a fast-growing product that combines mixers with a hard liquor base.
Since Washington voters privatized liquor sales in 2011, the association tried three times to mirror that change in Oregon and flirted with it again in 2024.
But Amanda Dalton, the associationโs CEO, says her group is not behind todayโs filing.
โWe, like the rest of the public, learned this afternoon about the filing of Initiative Petitions 43 and 19โthe Customer Choice and Convenience Acts of 2026 and 2028,” Dalton says.
โGiving Oregonians the choice and consumer convenience of shopping for all liquor products at their neighborhood grocery store continues to be a priority for NWGRA, and we commend the citizens behind these initiatives for working to bring the issue before voters.โ
John DiLorenzo, a Portland lawyer and lobbyist who previously worked on such measures, says heโs not involved, either.
In the newly filed initiatives, the chief petitioners took aim at one of the many public policy questions that surround privatization: What happens to the money the OLCC generates from liquor sales? (Liquor revenues are currently split between the stateโs general fund and local governments.)
The initiatives say proponents โwill ensure those dedicated revenues remain constant and do not decrease with expanded retail sales options.โ
Danelle Romain, who has successfully battled such initiatives as the executive director of the Oregon Beer and Wine Distributors Association in the past, says sheโs confident that no matter who is behind the measure, the result will be the same.
โOregonians have made it clear multiple times that theyโre not interested in liquor privatization, a system thatโs been a disaster for consumers, local producers and small businesses in Washington state,โ Romain says.









This is worse than pulling liquor away from the mafia. Good luck.