rkt: (guinnessh2o)
[personal profile] rkt
Teens not rushing online to buy wine, survey

By Donna Leinwand, USA TODAY

A year after the Supreme Court made it easier for wineries to ship products to customers in a different state, a new survey indicates that teens haven't necessarily rushed to use the Internet to buy alcohol, as critics of the court's decision have feared.

The survey by Teenage Research Unlimited (TRU) in Northbrook, Ill., found that 2% of youths ages 14-20 reported having purchased alcohol online, and that 12% reported having a friend who had ordered alcohol online.

The survey was commissioned by the Wine & Spirits Wholesalers of America, a trade group that opposed the court's decision allowing direct shipments from wineries to customers in different states.

Such bans on interstate sales were part of an alcohol distribution system that has required wineries, breweries and distilleries to sell their products to state-licensed wholesalers, which sell the products to liquor stores. The wholesalers group argued that besides cutting its members out of such sales, the court's ruling allowing interstate sales online made it easier for teens to buy alcohol without having to go through face-to-face transactions that require them to present an ID.

It's unclear how many teens were buying alcohol online before the court's ruling, but the TRU survey suggests such purchases are rare. The survey of 1,001 people ages 14-20 found that nearly all of those surveyed had Internet access at home and that about one-third were aware that alcohol could be purchased online. Fewer than 10% of the youths surveyed said they had browsed a website that sold alcohol. By contrast, 80% reported having browsed a sexually explicit site.

Tom Riley, spokesman for the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, said the survey indicates online alcohol sales to teens aren't a major problem, but he warned that could change. "While online sales of alcohol have not yet been a big part of the addiction problem, parents need to learn what teens already know: that the drug dealer who used to lurk in the seedy side of town is now just an e-mail or a URL away from your home."

However, Juanita Duggan of the wholesalers group called the survey results "shocking" and said she expects the number of teens ordering alcohol online to rise. "This is new, hard evidence that should really shake up this debate about direct sales. Every state has a policy choice to make."

Many states are revisiting their alcohol sales laws to comply with the court's ruling, which said New York and Michigan's bans on interstate sales illegally hindered commerce.


Point A: i love the headline

Point B: i'm not sure if i've know of anyone (underage) who, if they really wanted to get wine, didn't have some form of an Older Person who would do the buying, in person, without the aid of the internet.

Point C: if a *teenager*, living with hir guardian/parent/s purchased from this site, where would they have the shipment sent? i'm guessing that shipping alcohol in plain brown boxes, without return addresses, isn't the norm. consider that a hunch.

Point D: while i actually do believe the core of the story, always be wary of surveys involving teenagers. as a former teen, i can tell you they like to mess with the heads of a-dults. i'm guessing the only reason why that didn't play as much of a factor in this case is because the survey was paid for by people who want to get rid of internet liquor sales.

Point E: your turn.
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