A new drought for the victims of Sandy - booze

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
lmao and was glad it isn't me there. Bless their little hearts.


[h=1]Liquor drought looms in New Jersey after Sandy floods distributor’s warehouse[/h]
  • By KATE KOWSH and CHUCK BENNETT
  • From With Post Wire Services
  • Last Updated: 2:13 PM, November 9, 2012
  • Posted: 12:59 AM, November 9, 2012
There’s one group that Superstorm Sandy left dry — drinkers.
Floodwaters from the massive hurricane smashed a New Jersey liquor distributor, causing tens of millions of dollars in damage to its supply of top-shelf alcohol, the company said.
Yesterday, a sad mix of liquor and slush puddled on the ground outside Fedway Associates Inc.’s warehouse in Kearny — where the smell of red wine hung in the air as workers piled boxes and broken glass into an 8-foot-tall mountain.
The devastating deluge smashed bottles of pricy libations such as Grey Goose vodka and Cristal Champagne, leaving a river of booze pouring onto a pile of soggy cardboard.
09.1n004.booze--300x300.jpg
Robert Miller
DIS-SPIRITED: An avalanche of booze is dumped outside the warehouse of liquor distributor Fedway Associates in Kearny, NJ, yesterday. The company, the state’s exclusive distributor of many high-end spirits, said the storm surge had ruined its inventory.


“Hurricane Sandy dealt a near knockout blow to our south Kearny facility last week,” Fedway’s president, Neil Barnett, wrote on the company’s Facebook page.
“Our office building and warehouse buildings were hit with 10-foot tidal surges and, as a result, our infrastructure and inventories were severely compromised.”
The flood could leave countless Garden State drinkers crying in their glasses. Fedway is the state’s exclusive distributor of Cristal and other popular beverages, such as Svedka vodka, Bloomberg News reported.
In addition to smashing the bottles, the storm surge also crippled the company’s offices and delivery trucks.
Fedway said it hopes to be back in operation later this month after getting 100 delivery trucks and renting a 190,000-square-foot warehouse.
“We intend to begin shipping the week of November 19th and hope to be in full operation the first week in December,” Barnett wrote.
The company has been working around the clock to clean up the mess and get the high-end hooch flowing once more, he said.
“Drivers, warehouseman, salespeople, clerical workers, supervisors and managers have been working side by side, 24 hours per day since Friday,” Barnett wrote.
“We have contracted a 190,000-square-foot warehouse 200 yards from our main building and have already begun receiving replacement inventory.”
There’s good news for New York’s discerning drinkers — the destruction was unlikely to have much of an effect here.
Fedway does not distribute in the city, said Andrew Rigie, the executive director of the New York City Hospitality Alliance.
But Jersey liquor stores are likely to face a drought of many popular brands.
Fedway is the sole supplier of Grey Goose, the imported French vodka, said Sasha Vaynerchuk, 59, the owner of Wine Library in Springfield, where a 750-milliliter bottle of the top-shelf booze sells for $35.
“If somebody drinks Grey Goose, you can’t replace with Smirnoff or Ketel One,” Vaynerchuk said, adding that wine drinkers are more willing to buy other brands if a store doesn’t stock their favorite. “The customer has much more loyalty to spirits.”
Kenneth Friedman, owner of the liquor-store chain Bottle King, which has 15 shops in New Jersey, said the disruption was “a headache for everybody.”
“We’ll be out by the weekend,” Friedman said.
Don Carter, owner of the Wine Seller in Ridgewood, said he was out of Grey Goose and had only “a few cases” of Svedka.
New Jersey law blocks alcohol retailers from buying supplies from out-of-state distributors, but Gov. Chris Christie said he would consider lifting that restriction.
“If, in fact, that company came and asked me to consider that, I would consider it,” he said. “But to the best of my knowledge, they have not come and asked for any waiver or relaxation of that regulation.”
Barnett did not respond to calls for comment.
 
i think booze is the last thing people who are either homeless or living in homes with no heat and no food really gaf about ww..
 
i think booze is the last thing people who are either homeless or living in homes with no heat and no food really gaf about ww..
Really? I don't think so. It might not be the first thing but I'm sure I'd want a big fatty if it was me.

Actually, they are the sole provider of high-end liquor in the area and places that where not part of the damage are without their booze. I think we should rent a truck, load it full and make a big profit.
 
Really? I don't think so. It might not be the first thing but I'm sure I'd want a big fatty if it was me.

Actually, they are the sole provider of high-end liquor in the area and places that where not part of the damage are without their booze. I think we should rent a truck, load it full and make a big profit.

hmm, i'd think that most of them would much prefer a nice warm place to spend a night, or a hot meal for a change of pace, but by all mean, load up that truck and head on out..
 
hmm, i'd think that most of them would much prefer a nice warm place to spend a night, or a hot meal for a change of pace, but by all mean, load up that truck and head on out..
Once again it isn't for the those without a home or didn't you read my post.

Edit: Sorry Racer I had a bad and a good day. Didn't mean to take it out on you.
 
I think WW was saying that the areas not affected by sandy are without booze also, unless I'm reading it wrong

i'm in one of those area's .. the local booze shop is stocked to the rafters ... idk, seems like another sensationalized piece of news, and not a very sensational one at that..
again, all the shit going on in this state atm, i think booze falls way down on the bottom of the list of things to worry about... drove past a few houses collecting donations, and guess what?? i didn't see one bottle of cuervo among the stock piles of blankets and jackets..
 
I'm not a drinker but I know of a few people who can't go a day without some kind of booze in their system. most of them are relatives of mine, lol. but if I was a heavy drinker like I am a toker, I can see not having any liquor on hand being miserable
 
Thanks. I was too lazy to look the latin up for penis. Okay, how did you know that? ;-)

its not the latin term for penis, pinus is the genera for pine tree's but its pronounced penis. All the dendro students just say pine-us because imagine a class, OK look at this penis contorta(meaning contorted which is the spining of a pine needle) LMFAO. all true its called a lodgepole pine
 
its not the latin term for penis, pinus is the genera for pine tree's but its pronounced penis. All the dendro students just say pine-us because imagine a class, OK look at this penis contorta(meaning contorted which is the spining of a pine needle) LMFAO. all true its called a lodgepole pine

I hate to confess I went to MSU and took a whole semester on deciduous and coniferous trees. I should have caught that.
 
I hate to confess I went to MSU and took a whole semester on deciduous and coniferous trees. I should have caught that.
dude you are blessed. we hardly get deciduous tree's at all, most of this area is coniferous. as for not catching it. im still in school and know people who have gone threw school and its all based off short term memory. it even tkaes my teachers a good 10 seconds to remember allot of stuff they teach us. only 1 can raddle anything off the top of his head.
 
Thanks. You made me feel better. I remember a prof once said he'd be happy if we remembered 10% after graduation.
 
Back
Top