Enforcement Officers are assigned to the Education and Enforcement Division enforcing state alcohol, tobacco, vapor, cannabis products, and drug laws. These officers are fully sworn state trained police officers who are considered limited-authority law enforcement with authority only over the state's alcohol, tobacco, vapor, cannabis products, and drug laws. The Enforcement Division conducts compliance checks where underage and undercover Investigative Aides attempt to purchase alcohol or tobacco products from state licensed businesses. Individuals who sell to minors are cited and the associated business receives a notice of an administrative violation accompanied by associated fines. Officers serve search warrants and support local, state and federal agencies conducting alcohol, cannabis, tobacco, and vapor related investigations across the state. Officers also conduct premises checks and operations to detect public safety violations such as overserving patrons. The current Chief of the Enforcement and Education Division Lawerence Grant PhD as of March 3, 2025 according to the Agency. The Division has regional offices in
Federal Way,
Olympia,] and
Mount Vernon as well as field offices in
Seattle ,
Yakima, and
Pasco.
Alcohol Impact Areas (AIAs) In 2005, the
Seattle City Council asked the Liquor Control Board to prohibit the sale of certain
low-priced, highly-alcoholic beverages in an impoverished "Alcohol Impact Area". The City requested the order after an earlier, "Good Neighbor" policy, in which the city requested convenience stores and liquor outlets in areas with large
homeless populations voluntarily pull products known for their popularity with alcoholics, failed to adequately control the sale of such products to homeless individuals. Among the products sought to be banned were over two dozen beers, and six wines: Cisco, Gino's Premium Blend, MD 20/20, Night Train, Thunderbird, and Wild Irish Rose. The Liquor Control Board approved these restrictions on August 30, 2006. The cities of
Tacoma,
Spokane, and
Olympia also followed suit in instituting "Alcohol Impact Areas" of their own following Seattle's example.
Vancouver has an AIA that is technically voluntary, though it currently has a 100% retailer compliance rate. ==Licensing and Regulation Division==