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Sale or serving of alcoholic beverages from 3 a.m. Christmas Day until 7 a.m. December 26 was banned until HB 1542 was passed in 2015. [9] Indiana is not an alcoholic beverage control state. Public intoxication is a class B misdemeanor in Indiana. Merely being intoxicated in public is not a violation.
On-premises sales are permitted on January 1 until 4:00 a.m. Local or county ordinance may restrict Sunday or Sunday morning sales. State does not operate retail outlets; maintains a monopoly over wholesaling of distilled spirits only. [72] State owns liquor until purchased and distributor acts as a delivery service for cases sold to retailers.
The Indiana Alcohol and Tobacco Commission is an Indiana state government agency. The aims are: To protect the economic welfare, health, peace and morals of the people of this state; To regulate and limit the manufacture, sale, possession, and use of alcohol and alcoholic beverages; To provide for the raising of revenue
Save on Food (Continued) 17. Make a grocery list. Don’t get distracted in the snack aisle. You’ll save more and waste less by buying only what you need each time you go to the grocery store.
The Indiana Code is the code of laws for the U.S. state of Indiana. The contents are the codification of all the laws currently in effect within Indiana. With roots going back to the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, the laws of Indiana have been revised many times.
The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) established alphabetic and numeric codes for each state and outlying areas in ANSI standard INCITS 38:2009. ANSI standard INCITS 38:2009 replaced the Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) standards FIPS 5-2 , FIPS 6-4 , and FIPS 10-4 .
The codes were assigned by NIST and each uniquely identified a state, the District of Columbia, or an outlying area of the U.S. These codes were used by the U.S. Census Bureau, the Department of Agriculture to form milk-processing plant numbers, some cash registers during check approval, and in the Emergency Alert System (EAS).
In 2014, the Indiana state legislature passed a law that cut the corporate income tax from 8.50% in 2014 to 6.25% in 2016, with further decreases to be phased in until the rate falls to 4.9% in 2022. [5] Indiana is the only state that imposes corporate income taxes based on fiscal year instead of calendar year.