Dear Member,
We at Family Wineries of Washington State are writing to you
out of concern over sweeping winery licensing changes proposed in House Bill 1641.
This bill in its present form was introduced on January 24th, 2012,
less than 24 hours before the public hearing on the proposal in the Washington State
House of Representatives.
The justification for this licensing proposal as we
understand it is to address a concern among some in the industry that many
wineries are not actually meeting the requirements of their federal permits to
manufacture wine and therefore may be in danger of losing those permits. The proposed approach is to extend certain
privileges, notably tasting rooms, to such non-manufacturers. Essentially these are proprietors who are
effectively operating as distributors and retailers and are unwilling or unable
to meet the requirements necessary to hold a federal basic permit as other than
a wholesaler.
We have no objection to the extension of special privileges
to a new class of non-manufacturing wholesalers We do however strongly object
to the inclusion of wine manufacturers who choose to manufacture wine by means
other than fermentation in this new class of non-manufacturers. While in the
first case new rights are granted, in the second case existing rights are
severely curtailed.
The proposed licensing revisions would do the following
things which concern us for the stated reasons:
- Eliminate
the broadly defined word “manufacture” from the domestic winery license
and replace this with the presently undefined word “production.” A
“manufacturer” is currently defined as “a person engaged in the
preparation of liquor for sale in any form whatsoever.” The proposed definition of “production”
is “with respect to wine, the creation of wine by fermentation …” We
object to this provision because it limits the ways that a winery may be
licensed under federal and current state law for no apparent purpose.
- Under
the bill, wineries would be required to “produce” at least 200 gallons per
year by fermentation on a “three year rolling average.” In the latest
revision of the bill, made on January 26th, this 200 gallon requirement
was amended to allow a winery not meeting the minimum production level in
any year to demonstrate to the Liquor Control Board that they are a
“viable commercial wine-producing operation” according to criteria to be
determined by the Board at a later date. We object to this provision
because the federal law currently contains no annual minimum production level
by fermentation and no specific minimum threshold at all beyond
effectively “more than zero” gallons. The federal standard is designed for
maximum flexibility. The proposed
standard appears designed specifically to reduce that flexibility. Obviously compliance with this provision
is much more likely to be an issue for the smallest wineries than for the
largest. The alternative to demonstrate a “viable commercial wine-producing
operation” according to currently unspecified criteria seems to serve no
purpose other than to allow the establishment by the Board of a standard for
what constitutes a winery large enough to be considered “commercial.” We
believe that manufacturing of wine for sale is sufficient evidence of
commercial wine production to negate the need to demonstrate further.
- Domestic
wineries would be limited to buying bulk wine only from other domestic
wineries (by definition only Washington wineries). This is completely inconsistent with
federal law which provides no such restriction. As far as we are aware
this is unprecedented -- no other state has such a restriction. Inexplicably, no such restriction
applies to the proposed new “nonproducing” license which allows “purchase
of wine in bulk” without limitation as to origin.
- New
language is created defining the relationships between wineries and owners
of the brands they manufacture. We
are concerned that this language potentially conflicts with federal
trademark law and serves to solve no problem that has been identified to
the industry.
- A new category of license is created for “nonproducing wine sellers.” As noted above while this category extends new privileges (for example on-premise wine tasting) to those who can presently only qualify for a federal basic permit as a wholesaler, it requires that other categories of federal licensees (one example a proprietor with a premise licensed as a bonded wine cellar and a federal basic permit to blend wine) be lumped into this category. Such proprietors would be stripped of numerous privileges they currently have including off-premise tasting rooms, off premise warehouses, and the right to ship wine to retailers via common carrier. Wineries that are not meeting the requirements of their federal basic permits to produce or to blend will need to change to a federal basic permit as a wholesaler to be in compliance with their practices. We see no reason to require proprietors currently in compliance with their federal basic permits to be re-licensed as federal bonded wineries with a basic permit to produce wine, and further to require these proprietors to produce at least 200 gallons of wine per year through fermentation, just to avoid being lumped into the new nonproducing category and lose privileges in the process.
A copy of the latest version of the bill is attached. When reading this proposal please be advised
that some of the changes in the current version, including all of the changes
in sections 6 and 7, are useful changes to implement I-1183 and other non
controversial updates to the law such as changes to farmers market sales
language. Regrettably the inclusion of
this language in the bill will make it slightly harder to follow the proposed
licensing revisions which occur in sections 3 and 4, and proposed new section 5.
The new definition of wine “production” occurs in section 8 at item 35.
We believe a much simpler and less complicated approach to
achieving the stated objectives of this proposal is to amend this proposal to
restore wine manufacturing as the basis of the domestic winery license in RCW
66.24.170 and to replace the currently undefined phrase “wine of its own
production” with the phrase “wine of its own manufacture” throughout sections 3
and 4. We further propose elimination of the new definition of “production” in
section 8. Since this would return us to
the present situation where “production” is not defined, we propose to change
the name of the new “nonproducing license” to “negociant license.” We chose the term “negociant” to avoid use of
the word production which we believe, as noted above, is confusing. Finally we propose the deletion of sections
3.(3), 3.(4), 4.(3), and 4.(4) which include the minimum production language,
buying bulk wine only from Washington wineries, and the dangerous brand restriction
language.
With our proposed amendments (which are also attached) we
believe the new concept of a nonproducing/negociant license is beneficial to
some in the industry and harms none. We
are opposed to the proposal in its current form because, as noted above, it
will require needless re-licensing of wineries for federal purposes, restricts
currently legal practices, creates unprecedented production minimums, and moves
wine law in Washington in the direction of more complexity, not less.
We urge you to contact your legislators with your concerns
at your earliest convenience. For more
information on our proposed revisions please contact us at board@familywineriesofwashington.org.
Thank you for reading and considering our concerns in this
regard.
Sincerely
The FWWS Board