List of businesses closed by the Birmingham City Council: Difference between revisions

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* [[September 20]], [[1949]]: The [[Jordan Park Creamery]] at 815 [[12th Street South]] had its ABC license revoked by the [[Birmingham City Commission]] for selling beer on Sunday.
* [[September 20]], [[1949]]: The [[Jordan Park Creamery]] at 815 [[12th Street South]] had its ABC license revoked by the [[Birmingham City Commission]] for selling beer on Sunday.
* 1950s: A store on [[Huntsville Road]] in [[Collegeville]] was closed down by the [[Birmingham City Commission]] at the request of [[Fred Shuttlesworth]] following a murder.
* 1950s: A store on [[Huntsville Road]] in [[Collegeville]] was closed down by the [[Birmingham City Commission]] at the request of [[Fred Shuttlesworth]] following a murder.
* [[January 13]], [[1959]]: [[Ethel James]], owner of [[Ethel's Place]] at 230 [[10th Avenue North]] had her beer license revoked because she was alleged to have sold whisky without a license the previous December. ([https://www.newspapers.com/clip/116523846/ethels-place-loses-its-beer-license-s/ report])
* [[February 5]], [[1961]]: The [[Birmingham City Commission]] revoked the beer license held by [[Robert Nix|Robert]] and [[Olivia Nix]] for the [[Rainbow Gardens Cafe]] at 1751 [[18th Street Ensley]]. Police had seen two girls dancing near the juke box and, upon investigating, found that Mr Nix had sold a beer to an 18-year-old boy. ([https://cdm16044.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p16044coll1/id/19243/rec/2 report])
* [[February 5]], [[1961]]: The [[Birmingham City Commission]] revoked the beer license held by [[Robert Nix|Robert]] and [[Olivia Nix]] for the [[Rainbow Gardens Cafe]] at 1751 [[18th Street Ensley]]. Police had seen two girls dancing near the juke box and, upon investigating, found that Mr Nix had sold a beer to an 18-year-old boy. ([https://cdm16044.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p16044coll1/id/19243/rec/2 report])



Revision as of 15:09, 15 January 2023

This is a List of businesses closed by the Birmingham City Council:

Before 1990

1990s

2000s

2010s

2020s

This list is incomplete and may never satisfy any subjective standard for completeness. You can help Bhamwiki by expanding it.

Developments

In May 2013 the Council adopted the "Kevin Felder ordinance" creating new security and reporting requirements for nightclubs and event venues. It was named in memory of the victim of a fatal stabbing outside Club Zen which led to its closure.

In 2020 city attorney Nicole King established the "Office of the City Attorney's Drug and Nuisance Abatement Team" (OCA-DNAT) which has filed civil suits against businesses which are determined to have fostered nuisance conditions through negligence. The office takes complaints from the public and through the Birmingham Police Department. Businesses served with suits in 2020–2021 include the Monarch Ridge Apartments in Apple Valley and the Town Motel in Graymont.

References

External links