Mike_kever_kombi
Well-Known Member
If you look at the actual quotes, the only one to do with homebrewing is one that I think we can all say is very sensible, the idea that if you sell your beer you should need a license and follow health and safety standards. The article writer has no clue what they are writing about, I don't know where they get the idea that home brewers are a threat to craft breweries because McCormick never says that. The vast majority of actual information and quotes is about preventing big beer from screwing over craft brewers. If you look at the CCBA website, it's pretty much what you would expect to see, advocacy for craft breweries, PR for craft breweries in the state, etc. Not a trace of anything demeaning to say about home brewers.
I completely agree about licensing and health/quality standards, but if you really want to do the read the actual quote game, retread the article. He says that:
Its a change of night and day from eight years ago. They (legislators) didnt know who we are and what we were. "
There are stakeholders who would love to see those privileges eroded or taken away, McCormick said.
Talking about the 3 tier distribution system, which most would agree with, but then....
In the last session, lawmakers tightened a state statute from the 1950s that allowed small brewers to hold an unlimited number of licenses to open taprooms and tasting rooms.
This is for sub 60k barrels annually, so a small/micro/craft brewer.
We felt that putting some type of cap on these duplicate licenses was in the best interest of the industry, McCormick said. I really do feel strongly about that because allowing an unlimited number of tasting rooms across the state by a brewery could get out of hand in a number of ways.
Yes, it might actually allow smaller volume Brewers to compete on a level playing field with the big guys, by not having to rely on a distributor (owned by the big guys) to distribute your products
McCormick said. The association also is looking to extend the duplicate license law to breweries that produce more than 60,000 barrels.
The Big Boys
Who's looking out for craft brew here?
This has nothing to do with protecting craft beer as much as it does with protecting interests.
If you think anything else...
the Golden State grew by 20 percent in volume last year and contributed $5.5 billion to the states economy
During the latest election cycle, $2.4 million poured into candidates for state offices from the beer, wine and spirits industry.
I am all for craftbeer, in general, and supporting local Brewers and small businesses as a whole. However let's face it, if you have a 100 Brewers making 1 million a year or 10 Brewers making 10 million a year, it's still 100 million annually no matter how you slice it.
The fault lies in misrepresentation, you are not really trying to get the million for the hundred, but the 10 million for the 10 that "contribute" to your organization.
Just because you put lipstick on a pig doesn't make it a prom queen.