Santa Claus isn’t the only one coming to town this Christmas!

Paying attention to ABC press releases should be everyone’s job. On November 16th the ABC proudly announced a $2 million grant (from the office of traffic safety) running through September 2016 that will be distributed to local police departments around the state in $10,000 to $25,000 bites.

http://www.abc.ca.gov/press/PR2015/PR15-29.pdf

The purposes of the programs being funded by this grant are very important (enforcing the laws against sales to minors, funding backtracks from alcohol involved auto accidents, funding LEAD training, and so forth).  These programs are crucial to understanding ABC enforcement priorities. Every licensee (retailer, winery, distillery, brewery, etc.) in this state who has (or in the case of distilleries, will have on January 1, 2016) the right to sell their beverages for consumption in their establishment or tasting room should know what laws the ABC is enforcing, and how the laws are being implemented.

This particular press release presages enhanced enforcement through decoy programs, shoulder tap programs and visiting licensed premises to observe operations - - right now, throughout the holiday season, and into next year.

Licensees should view this as an opportunity to make sure that their employee compliance programs are current and that all employees with service responsibilities have been trained. Failure to train and use all the tools available to do so (including the LEAD program – which is getting funded by the grant) exposes tasting rooms, retail store, hotels, resorts, bars and restaurants to law enforcement agents (not just decoys) who are on the street testing the protocols of the unwary licensee.

Licenses are not only too valuable to risk over training failures but the societal cost of failures can be catastrophic if the offense is a back track from a fatal accident. We have tried those cases and they are tragic. Train your staff. Don’t be one of the unwary.

Arizona's Direct to Consumer Shipping Rules - An Exercise in Complexity

Many wineries that ship direct to consumer (DTC) in Arizona have received compliance notices from the AZ Dept. of Liquor Licenses and Control (DLLC), seeking to audit how much wine they produce to assure compliance under Arizona’s byzantine DTC laws. 

What’s going on in Arizona?

People are wondering, what’s going on in Arizona? According to the DLLC the step-up in enforcement is due to a recently-implemented new reporting mechanism developed with input from the industry to make it easier for wineries to do their reporting (which is not a new requirement), and for the state to track that reporting.  To streamline the process, reporting is now done online (via this page).

Arizona has the dubious distinction of having some of the most complicated direct shipping rules in the country.  We thought it might be helpful if we broke them down and made them a little easier to understand for non-Arizona wineries (and tiny distillers – you too can ship direct!):

The Production Requirements – What are they?

The bottom line is that the amount of alcohol produced per calendar year by the licensee with the permit is the basis for the Arizona direct shipping rules.  It’s best to be a very small winery, and the requirement to be licensed is measured on a facility by facility basis. Each individual winery (regardless of common ownership by a parent company) counts as one permittee.  If the winery produces between 200 gallons/year and 20,000 gallons/year and obtains an Out of State Farm Winery license from the DLLC, the winery will be allowed to ship any amount of wine that the winery produces or manufactures to an Arizona individual, regardless of whether they purchased the wine in person at the winery, or over the Internet, phone or other method.  Wineries in this category are also allowed to sell direct to trade (i.e. to Arizona retailers, both on- and off-premise). 

Craft Distillers are included in the DTC program

Small craft distillers may take advantage of this privilege:  A craft distiller producing no more than 1,189 gallons/year (and obtaining an Out of State Craft Distillery license), may ship any amount of their products directly to AZ residents who order it via Internet or any other method, as well as directly to AZ retailers. This is an important privilege.

What about the larger wineries?  Now it gets confusing. The 8,333 to 16,600 case winery restrictions

It a winery produces between 20,000 and 40,000 gallons (16,666 9L cases of wine) per year, it is still eligible for a Farm Winery permit, but the winery can only ship its wine to an Arizona resident who had at some point visited and made an in-person purchase at the winery with the permit, and the winery is limited to shipping 2 cases per individual per year.  The winery must keep records that can back up the in-person visit, such as a signature and ID-verification in a logbook, etc., as Arizona requires such records to be kept for two years.   This is where the audit comes into play, as the state audits the production limits, the visit requirement and 2 cases per year requirement.

How about the big wineries, can they do anything?

Yes. Although wineries that produce over 40,000 gallons/year are not eligible for the Farm Winery Permit, if they hold any other license in Arizona (such as an Out of State Producer license for shipping to Arizona wholesalers), they don’t need any additional license in order to ship DTC, though they still must follow the in-person purchase rule and the 2-case per person per year rule.

This is important: The DLLC interprets the in-person purchase requirement to mean that the person must visit the winery, at some point (and the winery must have records to back this up), but does not require that person to place each subsequent order in-person at the winery. The winery is required to keep records for two years, but in order to keep shipping directly to a person beyond the two-year period, the winery would need to have a record of that person's on-site purchase (which may reach back more than two years). Again, this is subject to audit.    

General Requirements

For all of the direct shipment methods described above, age verification at time of purchase is required.  Additionally, products cannot be shipped to a licensed premises but only to an individual for personal use; the delivery person must be at least 21; and the packaging must contain language identifying the contents as alcohol and that an adult signature is required.  And last but not least, shipment reports are required from both the shipping winery and the carrier that shipped the product.

Finally, the Arizona Direct Shipment Permit

And finally, there is what’s called a Direct Shipment permit in Arizona – but it’s not at all what it sounds like, and is a last resort.  It is for any winery that holds no other licenses in Arizona and wishes to ship DTC to consumers who have not visited the winery in person. It allows an out of state winery to take orders via Internet or any other method from and ship to a consumer, but the shipment must go through an Arizona wholesaler and retailer, and the retailer must be the one who makes the delivery to the consumer.  Cumbersome? Yes.  Does anyone do this?  Probably not many large wineries take advantage of this dubious solution.

What’s next?

There are rumblings that the confusing DTC situation in Arizona may be cleared up with legislation next year, so stay tuned.  However if you get an audit letter, read this blog post (and the requirements in the audit letter) carefully and make sure that you are eligible for the shipping method that you are using.  Failure to properly comply carries potentially serious consequences.

 

AB 780 - Social Media and the ABC: The California Legislative “Fix” that Fails

By John Hinman & Rebecca Stamey-White

The recent news about California’s AB 780 being signed into law tells an inspiring story about freedom on social media for alcohol suppliers, but is it really true?  Unfortunately… not really. (Cue the bursting bubble that usually trails lawyers).

AB 780, intended to address the Save-Mart Grape Escape ABC accusations, was signed into law by Governor Brown on Monday. 

AB 780 doesn't even pretend to be a method of solving the social media issues currently bedeviling the industry. Rather, the bill was an attempt by well-meaning politicians to address constituent issues while not interfering with the stranglehold that the wholesalers lobby has on Sacramento.  A more robust solution that would have actually accomplished the goal of freeing social media was supported by senior ABC officials as well as every supplier trade association in the state but was blocked by the wholesalers.  

Here is what AB 780 does NOT do:

  • It does NOT allow wineries, breweries or distillers to post on social media that they will be pouring at retailer title-sponsored charity-licensed event such as the "Save-Mart Grape Escape" put on and licensed by the Sacramento Convention & Visitors Bureau.  That still remains a crime and at least one Grape Escape accusation is still in the process of being adjudicated. The existing laws still prevent suppliers from legally promoting retail title sponsors of charitable festivals and events, an entirely separate form of harm to communities and organizations doing good work.
  • It does NOT permit wineries, breweries or distillers to sponsor events where there are any "tied house" relationships (including the payment of a rental fee to a retail account) between an event organizer and the winery, brewery or distiller. For example, the BottleRock 2013 accusations (now at the ABC Appeals board) are not affected by this bill.
     
  • It does NOT affect the existing exceptions that allow some suppliers to promote their involvement in and location of legal tasting events occurring on retail premises. (Disclaimer: these exceptions are event and statute specific and do not apply to all events nor to all supplier license types.) 

Here is what AB 780 DOES do:

  • It DOES require suppliers to observe current law (combining two existing statutes into one statute with truly minor changes to existing law).

Under current law, some supplier licensees may list two or more unaffiliated on-sale retailers selling their product (like bars and restaurants) under Business and Professions Code Section 25500.1 and may list two or more unaffiliated off-sale retailers selling their product (like liquor stores, wine shops, etc.) under Business and Professions Code Section 25502.1. These restrictions (which include other limitations--such as no pricing information, the listing is the only reference to the retailer and the retailer can’t jointly pay for the listing) are basically unchanged under AB 780 (which combines 25500.1 and 25502.1 into 25500.1 and eliminates 25502.1) except that now the furnishing of the information does NOT have to be in response to a “direct inquiry from a consumer,” a provision that has never (to our knowledge) even been enforced by the ABC.

What does this mean for the industry?  More confusion, more complaints, and more difficulty in threading the tied house needles that currently are scattered throughout the ABC Act.

This bill does, however, update the current locator service exemption that exists in the ABC Act for suppliers to list on their websites, social media or other publications where their products may be found, as long as at least two unaffiliated retailers are mentioned.

This of course prevents announcing new account placements unless other accounts are also mentioned.  Designing ways to use that new exemption will be fun for all.  For example, think about this:

"Jack's Restaurant in San Francisco now carries our wines, but  don't forget to find our wine at Jill's Wine Bar across the street!"

Despite the lack of meaningful change, let's all remember to have fun with social media and perhaps think of the ABC restrictions as a creative challenge for marketers, while encouraging those suppliers with one retail account to pick up another so they can advertise where to find their product.

We still need real reform and if it doesn't come from the legislature maybe it will come from the cases that are working their way through the system.

Illinois Finally Offers Certainty and Relief for Victims of Sales Tax Lawsuits, but Prompt Action is Required in Pending Cases

As reported in our earlier Blog Post, wineries and retailers that sell online and ship to Illinois consumers have been victimized by a barrage of lawsuits filed by one Chicago law firm to collect sales tax supposedly due on Shipping & Handling charges.  While the claims asserted have largely been meritless, Illinois has allowed the lawsuits to proceed for years.  Because the cost of defending the cases has exceeded the cost of settlement, almost all cases have settled, resulting in a large windfall to the law firm and to the State of Illinois, which has collected a portion of the “back taxes” that were not owed in the first place. 

The government of Illinois has finally decided to put a stop to this process.  On August 28, 2015, the Illinois Department of Revenue issued proposed regulations that embody what has long been the law of Illinois:  wine producers and wine retailers selling wine to Illinois consumers are not required to collect sales tax on Shipping & Handling charges if:

·         The Shipping & Handling charges are stated separately from the price of the wine;

·         The seller offers the option to have the wine picked up at its facility (winery, tasting room, etc.), instead of having it shipped, even if that facility is not in Illinois; and

·         The price of the wine is the same regardless of whether they are picked up or shipped into Illinois, and no additional “profit” is earned on Shipping and Handling charges.

The proposed regulations will not become effective until they are approved by a committee of the Illinois Legislature, which will not occur until after a 45-day period for public comment.  If approved, the regulations would be retroactive to November 2009, effectively eliminating any claims (by the State or Qui Tam plaintiffs) for back taxes on Shipping and Handling under the Illinois 6-year statute of limitations for such claims, if the wine producer or retailer can demonstrate compliance with the requirements.

Notwithstanding that the regulations are not yet effective, the Illinois Attorney General has stated that her Office will review pending claims brought by the plaintiff law firm to collect sales taxes (but not settled claims).   The Attorney General will exercise her prerogative to dismiss any cases brought against a winery that was in compliance with the three requirements of the proposed regulations.  The defendants in the pending cases need to submit affidavits with proof of their compliance with those requirements and the period during which they were in compliance.  (Note that the State could still seek back taxes for any period in which a defendant was not in compliance). 

To obtain this review, the defendants must submit their proof by September 15.  Every defendant that would qualify for relief should contact their Illinois counsel and submit the required proof promptly.  This long-overdue action by Illinois will hopefully end the meritless claims against online sellers in that State.

We are counselling clients to review carefully their terms and conditions of sale.  We encourage all wineries, whether or not they sell wine to Illinois residents in accordance with an Illinois DTC permit, to review their website terms and conditions for compliance with legal requirements.   This basic level of legal due diligence will pay great dividends in preventing exposure to actions such as the ones initiated by the plaintiff lawyers in Illinois.

A Modest Proposal – Adopt the federal rule on Tied-House liability in California

While Congress no doubt anticipated agency vigilance, we cannot agree that the legislature meant to allow enforcement actions on the basis of the Bureau's unsubstantiated beliefs; if the Bureau suspects that a particular inducement places retailer independence at risk and thus that the inducement is proscribed by the FAAA, it must provide substantial support backing up its suspicion--at least where, as here, the anticompetitive nature of the inducement is nowhere apparent on its face. In this regard, our view accords with that of the Seventh Circuit in Foremost: "[A] mandate to address real threats in their incipiency is not an instruction to disregard the distinction between friend and foe; it is not a mandate to control weeds by scorching the earth." Justice Ginsberg’s decision in Fedway Associates v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, 976 F.2d 1416 (DC Cir. 1992) (quoting Foremost Sales Promotions, Inc. v. Director, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, 860 F.2d at 239 (7th Cir.1988)).

What, you ask, does this have to do with Booze Rules?

Well, right now there are several California “tied-house” cases at various levels of the hearing and appeal process where the principles articulated by Justice Ginsberg are very relevant.

In the two or so dozen “Bottlerock 2013” accusations filed by the ABC against the defendant suppliers, the ABC charged a “thing of value” violation for paying a sponsorship fee to an unlicensed festival organizer (an LLC).  Despite the ABC issuing a temporary special event license for the event following full disclosure of the sponsorship agreements, once the event was over, an ABC investigator found out (through an arduous records search in Sacramento) that the Bottle Rock Festivals LLC executives had individual passive minority investment interests in a real estate investment trust.  The REIT, it was discovered through a search of internal non-public ABC records, owned a 20% interest in the Uptown Theatre, a Type 41 (wine and beer) licensed venue in the City of Napa. These REIT interests (one executive was the trustee of a trust - not an interest, in fact - and in the other owned less than a 1% interest) were not only truly minor, non-controlling (and impossible to find even by reference to the ABC’s license database) but were unknown to the sponsoring wineries.

In fact, the interests would not have even mattered to the wineries had they known of them because (in the cases we tried) the wineries were not marketing their wine to the Uptown Theatre. Moreover, no wineries were participating in or sponsoring the artist after parties that were held at the Uptown Theatre (the after-parties were disclosed to the ABC before the festival) and the event organizers had no clue that their involvement with the Uptown was a problem for anyone because they were not involved in any way in operating or managing the Uptown Theater.

If this sounds confusing it is because it is confusing: the stretch that had to be made by the ABC  to make any connection between the sponsorships and the Uptown theatre was positively Kafkaesque (“marked by a senselessdisorienting, often menacing complexity”). Regardless of how it’s viewed, however, there is no argument with the proposition that no winery involved with the festival was trying to control or affect the Uptown Theater through corrupt or anti-competitive activity.

These facts were not contested by the ABC in the hearings. What was contested is the standard of liability.  The ABC currently maintains that the tied house liability standard is strict and that knowledge of the relationship between the vendor being engaged and a retail account, or any actual corrupt or anti-competitive connection between the wineries sponsorship funds and the retail licensee, is not necessary for a violation to be found. And, indeed, that is what the ABC held to be the law in the decisions now being appealed.

In the Grape Escape accusations (see: The Grapes Escaped), the accused wineries and breweries used social media (Facebook, Tweets, etc.) to communicate the proper name and logo of a long-standing Sacramento non-profit event. The accused suppliers were simply telling their consumers that they were going to be at the event.  The charged violation was that the title sponsor of the event was a retailer and, therefore, the ABC asserted, the use of the event logo with the name of the retailer was a “thing of value” to that retailer regardless of whether or not the winery or brewery sold its wine or beer to that retailer.  

The fear and apprehension among suppliers after the ABC accusations were filed (which caused many suppliers to discontinue their participation in the longstanding event) resulted in this year’s event being cancelled. The sponsoring organization (the Sacramento Convention and Business Bureau) has as a result been effectively prohibited from soliciting title sponsorship funds (which historically supported the event, and benefitted the entire Sacramento region) from any licensed retailer.

According to the ABC, these sponsorships and advertisements violate the California tied-house law because the law must be strictly (and rigidly) interpreted without regard to proof of knowledge, actual tangible benefit to the retail licensee, any actual anti-competitive effect or any corrupt motive or purpose.  There was no argument made by the ABC in any of cases that the acts charged (sponsoring a music festival and using social media to inform consumers about an event where the winery was pouring wine) encouraged or abetted any anticompetitive or corrupt activity. Rather, the ABC’s argument goes, the mere fact that the direct or indirect (in the Bottlerock cases) relationship exists violates the mandate of the statute.

This should strike fear in the heart of every licensee in this state.

The obvious consequences are that every vendor relationship entered into by the winery (or other licensed supplier, including distillers and breweries) must be analyzed for upstream direct or indirect tied house connections to a licensed retailer. Otherwise the winery (and the retailer) is always at risk of a violation. The consequences of a violation are significant. Besides the potential risk of a license suspension (or revocation for a repeat offender) once a winery or other supplier is convicted of (or pleads guilty to) a violation of the tied house laws that becomes a reportable prior conviction on every out of state shipper and DTC permit filed or renewed from that moment on by the winery.  Failure to report the violation is usually a violation in the other states because almost all application forms require accurate disclosure under penalty of perjury. It is for this reason that many Bottlerock and Grape Escape defendants are pursuing their remedies through the administrative hearing process, which may end up in the appellate courts. That is a long, arduous and expensive process and, while it is playing out, normal commercial activities are being conducted under a cloud of risk.

This brings us back to Justice Ginsberg. Fedway was a landmark decision where the principles upon which all tied-house laws going back to Prohibition are based were reviewed and analyzed.  In Fedway, the crime charged was giving consumer goods to retailers in exchange for purchasing more products.   The analysis focused on whether or not the “crime” actually encouraged the sort of corrupt practices that the tied-house laws were originally intended to prevent.  Justice Ginsberg found that the actions of the supplier in Fedway did not rise to the level of a corrupt practice and were, in fact, a form of quantity discount, a perfectly legitimate sales and marketing tool.

Her reasoning was that the tied-house laws (as adopted by Congress following Prohibition) were intended to prevent supplier domination and control of retail accounts through practices (such as unlimited credit, consignment sales, hidden ownership interests, free goods and actual bribery – pay to play) that were corrupt and anti-competitive.  As she found, the tied house laws were not intended to punish normal business practices that did not involve corrupt or anti-competitive practices.

The result of this 1992 case was the 1994 adoption of federal regulations interpreting the Federal Alcohol Administration Act. The newly enacted regulations required proof of actual corrupt conduct in order for the agency to bring a disciplinary action against a licensee. See: 27 CFR 6.151 to 6.153.

The federal authorities have now used these FAA Act regulations successfully for over 20 years to challenge conduct they consider to be corrupt or anti-competitive.

Our question:  why can’t California establish a similar standard?

The ABC Act is supposed to be “liberally construed” to benefit the people of the state:

Section 23001: This division is an exercise of the police powers of the State for the protection of the safety, welfare, health, peace, and morals of the people of the State, to eliminate the evils of unlicensed and unlawful manufacture, selling, and disposing of alcoholic beverages, and to promote temperance in the use and consumption of alcoholic beverages. It is hereby declared that the subject matter of this division involves in the highest degree the economic, social, and moral well–being and the safety of the State and of all its people. All provisions of this division shall be liberally construed for the accomplishment of these purposes

Because the ABC Act is intended to foster the “economic…well-being” of the State and “all its people” (“the people” includes wineries, breweries and distillers, who are responsible for much of the current economic well-being of this state) licensees should not be deprived (by virtue of a strict liability test that does not permit a defense) of the right to prove that the act they are accused of committing does not involve corrupt activity and anti-competitive activity.

Moreover, we believe that in cases where the ABC seeks to penalize truthful commercial speech (including in social media), the ABC is required to prove that the penalty would substantially further one of the state’s legitimate interests, i.e., that the speech has an actual anti-competitive or corrupt effect.

The standard currently being applied by the ABC (strict liability without regard to the facts or proof that corrupt activity was involved) has created a climate of fear and apprehension that is inhibiting normal commercial activity, the use of social media and the ability of licensees at all levels to connect with each other for normal commercial purposes.

Thus, unless the ABC is willing to interpret its mandate in accordance with Section 23001 of the ABC Act (which it can do if it wants to  – the ABC has great discretion in the exercise of its statutory mandate), we modestly propose a new section of California law modeled after the successful federal regulation emanating from Justice Ginsberg’s Fedway decision.

Here is our suggested language, modified specifically for California and tracking 27 CFR Part 6.153 in concept and effect:

Criteria for determining regulatory liability for tied house thing of value violations.

The criteria specified in this section are indications that a particular practice, which would include the furnishing of a thing of value by a supplier to a retailer not otherwise exempted by this Chapter, subjects the participants to regulatory liability for violating this Chapter.  A practice need not meet all of the criteria specified in this section in order to subject the participant to regulatory liability.

(a) The practice restricts or hampers the free economic choice of a retailer to decide which products to purchase or the quantity in which to purchase them for sale to consumers.

(b) The supplier obligates the retailer to participate in the promotion to obtain the supplier's product.

(c) The retailer has a continuing obligation to purchase or otherwise promote the suppliers product.

(d) The retailer has a commitment not to terminate its relationship with the supplier’s with respect to purchase of the industry member's products.

(e) The practice involves the supplier in the day-to-day operations of the retailer. For example, the supplier controls the retailer's decisions on which brand of products to purchase, the pricing of products, or the manner in which the products will be displayed on the retailer's premises.

(f) The practice is discriminatory in that it is not offered to all retailers in the local market on the same terms without business reasons present to justify the difference in treatment.

Justice Ginsberg was right when she said that “[a] mandate to address real threats in their incipiency is not an instruction to disregard the distinction between friend and foe; it is not a mandate to control weeds by scorching the earth.

The regulated alcoholic beverage industry is not the foe of the ABC. The entire industry is invested in preventing corruption. However if the ABC is unwilling to make distinctions between corrupt activity and normal business practices, and insists on the blind bureaucratic application of statutes dating back to the 1930’s, then we must ask the Governor, our elected representatives and our courts to instruct the ABC to apply its discretion in support of the industry and not to punish licensees for normal commercial conduct that actually fosters a healthy alcoholic beverage industry in California. 

 

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  75. Pernicious Practices (stuff we see that will get folks in trouble!) Today’s Rant – Bill & Hold
  76. CBD: An Exciting New Fall Schedule… or Not?
  77. MISSISSIPPI RISING - A VICTORY FOR LEGAL RETAILER TO CONSUMER SALES, AND PASSAGE OF TITLE UNDER THE UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE
  78. California ABC's Cannabis Advisory - Not Just for Stoners
  79. NEW CALIFORNIA WARNINGS FOR ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES AND CANNABIS PRODUCTS TAKE EFFECT AUGUST 30, 2018, NOW INCLUDING ADDENDUM REGARDING 2014 CONSENT AGREEMENT PARTIES AND PARTICIPANTS
  80. National Conference of State Liquor Administrators – The Alcohol Industry gathers in Hawaii to figure out how to enforce the US “Highly Archaic Regulatory Scheme.”
  81. Founder John Hinman Honored with the Raphael House Community Impact Award
  82. ROUTE TO MARKET AND MARKETING RESTRICTIONS - NAVIGATING REGULATORY SYSTEM CONSTRAINTS
  83. Alcohol and Cannabis Ventures: Top 5 Legal Considerations
  84. ATF and TTB: Is Another Divorce on the Horizon? What’s Going on with the Agency?
  85. STRIKE 3 - YOU REALLY ARE OUT! THE ABC'S STRICT APPLICATION OF PENALTIES FOR SALES TO MINORS
  86. TTB Temporarily Fixes Problem with Fulfillment Warehouse Tax Credits - an “Alternate Procedure” for Paying Taxes & Reporting
  87. CUSTOMERS WHO HAVE HAD ONE TOO MANY - THE FREE TRANSPORTATION DILEMMA
  88. The Renaissance of Federal Unfair Trade Practices - Current Issues and Strategies
  89. ‘Twas the week before New Year’s and the ABC is out in Force – Alerts for the Last Week of 2017, including the Limits on Free Rides
  90. Big Bottles, Caviar and a CA Wine Strong Silent Auction for the Holidays!
  91. The FDA and the Wine and Spirits Industry – Surprise inspections anyone?
  92. NORTHERN CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES: UPDATED REGULATORY AGENCY DISASTER RELIEF RESOURCES AT A GLANCE
  93. NORTHERN CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES: REGULATORY AGENCY DISASTER RELIEF RESOURCES AT A GLANCE
  94. Soon to come to your Local Supermarket– Instant Redeemable Coupons of the digital age!
  95. The License Piggyback Dilemma – If it Sounds Too Good to be True, it Probably is
  96. A timely message from our Florida colleagues on the tied house laws, the three-tier system and the need for reform
  97. ABC Declaratory Rulings – A Modest Proposal Whose Time has Come
  98. More on FDA Inspections - Breweries, Distilleries and Questions
  99. WHY THE FDA IS INSPECTING WINERIES
  100. Senate Bill 378—The Proposed Demise of Due Process for Alcohol Licensees