Friday, May 30, 2008

The New Illinois Wine Law




Today CLTV starting airing a new piece regarding the new Illinois wine bill that will go into effect on Sunday, June 1, 2008. It is a bill that the Illinois Winemakers' Alliance has been fighting and will continue to fight. WATCH THIS STORY UNFOLD .

The
governor and many other individuals consider this bill to be beneficial to Illinois wine consumers and even market it as a great thing for the Illinois wineries. What has actually happened is that the three largest wineries, creating over 60% of the wine made in Illinois, have had their rights stripped from them. Before HB 0429 passed 2nd class wineries (wineries producing over 25,000 gallons of wine per year) in Illinois were able to sell 10,000 gallons of wine direct. With the new bill, 1st class wineries (wineries producing under 25,000 gallons of wine per year were given the ability to sell 5,000 gallons direct per year, while the large wineries were stripped of all direct shipping abilities.

What does this mean to the consumer? It means that if someone loves
Cooper's Hawk, Galena Cellars or Lynfred wines and wants to buy them at a restaurant, they will be paying more. The reason? The second class wineries now must go through a distributor; tacking on dollars to the consumer. We find that to be discriminatory. We are living with liquor laws from the 1930's. Ridiculous.

Tom Wark, Executive Director of the SWRA, had a commentary in the Chicago Tribune the other day that truly sums it up. Bill Daley from the Tribune followed it up with a blog, too.

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