Wheat pulls liquor
question off City Councel agenda By
DAVE HAMRICK
Staff Writer
Mayor
Mike Wheat took liquor off the agenda before
Fayetteville's City Council meeting Tuesday,
saying the time is not right to discuss the
matter.
I
feel that it ought to be either unanimous or 4-1
before we put [liquor] on the ballot without a
petition from the voters, Wheat said.
He
had talked to council members before the meeting,
he added, and it looked like it was just
going to be 3-2 in favor of putting a
referendum on liquor by the drink on the ballot
for the city's Nov. 2 election.
To
take a 3-2 vote on a referendum I didn't think
was a very good signal to send to the
community, he added.
Lane
Brown, who has been working to get enough
signatures on a petition to force a vote on
liquor, said he is only 90 signatures short of
the 1,740 needed. He asked council to consider
notifying the U.S. Justice Department that the
question will be on the ballot to give him extra
time to get the final signatures.
I've
got 1,650 signatures, said Lane. That
should give an indication that they do want it on
the ballot.
We'll
think about that, said Wheat.
Carl
Davis, representing the Lakemont Homeowners
Association, had attended the council meeting to
comment on a zoning matter, but during the liquor
discussion stood up and told Lane his
neighborhood could supply the 90 additional
signatures needed to put liquor on the ballot.
Davis and Brown huddled after the meeting.
Brown
said Wednesday he will work with Davis to canvas
the neighborhood of more than 300 homes in search
of the 90 signatures needed.
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