Council to vote on liquor-license transfer as zoning concerns persist

Erie City Council · April 2, 2026

Loading...

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Council discussed an intermunicipal liquor-license transfer that remains contingent on zoning review; the city zoning officer said the property owner is scheduled before the Zoning Hearing Board on April 14, and council debated whether zoning confirmation should precede the license transfer vote.

Chair opened discussion of an intermunicipal liquor-license transfer and said council would cast a vote on the transfer at today’s meeting.

Lawmaker said several councilors wanted clarification about whether zoning and other permitting were settled before the city approved the license transfer. “We’re gonna be casting a vote today on that transfer of that liquor license,” the Lawmaker said, and asked colleagues if they had questions for the solicitor.

Attorney and zoning issues were central to the exchange. Amy Francis, the city’s Zoning Officer, told the council the property owner is scheduled for the Zoning Hearing Board on April 14 and has filed required paperwork; she said, after the zoning hearing, the owner would need to pursue proper permits and building-code approvals. “The property owner is on the agenda for April 14, so you will hear that as well,” Amy Francis said.

A number of councilors raised process concerns, arguing zoning clarification should come before or run in tandem with any licensing decision. One councilor urged caution, saying the sequence felt premature and warning against setting an undesirable precedent. The Lawmaker responded that the transfer language requires the applicant to “follow all the laws of Pennsylvania, the ordinances of the city of Erie, and any rules and regulations through the liquor control board,” and that the zoning office would confirm compliance.

Why it matters: A liquor-license transfer can enable a business to open, but local zoning, nuisance history and neighborhood concerns influence whether a new operation is appropriate for a site. Councilors said they wanted to ensure zoning determinations, any required stipulations and neighborhood protections are resolved before final action.

What happens next: Amy Francis’s statement places a zoning hearing on April 14. Council discussed proceeding with a license vote today but repeatedly noted that any license approval is subject to applicable state and city rules and to what the zoning hearing determines.

The council did not record a completed final vote in the transcript excerpts provided; the matter remained under discussion with the zoning hearing date noted.