Maryland set to allow direct wine shipping
- Friday 10 June 2011
Free the Grapes!: 'encouraged'
The signing of House Bill 1175 and Senate Bill 248 means that, subject to licensing regulations, consumers in Maryland will be able to receive shipments direct from wineries as of 1 July.
Jeremy Benson, executive director of campaigning group Free the Grapes!, welcomed the news, but cautioned that retailers were excluded from the bill.
However, he said, ‘The coalition of supporters is encouraged by legislator comments in the press that indicate a willingness to make such improvements in the future.’
Maryland is set to become the 38th state in the US to allow consumers to buy wine direct from licensed wineries, along with Washington DC.
Together this accounts for about 85% of total US wine consumption.
However, some states continue to resist the move. A House committee in Delaware has now refused to release a bill allowing direct shipping, meaning that the proposed legislation cannot even be debated by the full chamber.
‘It’s a little frustrating that a bill that would allow Delawareans to enjoy what most Americans can already do is not even being allowed to be considered on the House floor,’ said Republican state representative Deborah Hudson, who sponsored the bill.
However, the state’s Alcoholic Beverage Control Commission acknowledges that illegal direct shipments are probably commonplace because the legislation is so hard to enforce.
Dismissed as ‘archaic’ by campaigners, the three-tier distribution framework drawn up in the wake of Prohibition in the 1930s channels alcohol sales through licensed distributors and retailers before they can reach the public.

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Have your say!
No
June 23 16:44
it isn't the fault of those who wanted direct shipment that they tacked on the tax to that bill as well. That tax hike would have happened with or without the shipping. It is about time this foresaken sake get with the program. Things are even worse in Montgomery County.
Alex
June 15 13:04
Bless. Land of the free, apparently (terms and conditions apply).
Karl
June 10 18:56
In every state it's the distributors sponsoring the bills that prohibit direct shipping. This isn't Democracy, it's "pay to play".
Gary
June 10 14:46
Unfortunately, In exchange for allowing this change in Maryland's direct shipping law, the legislature increased the sales tax on all alcoholic beverages by 50%. So, the few people who now get their wines directly from producers or out of State retailers, have effectively asked their neighbors to fund their hobby every time they order a bottle of wine in a restaurant, or a beer at the ballgame. This debate was never about freedom, it was about tax revenue - something anyone who lives in Maryland would know.