DiningBuzz! - California Legislature Approves Second Tasting Room Bill




cordelli
Sep 23, 09, 7:01 pm
Several wineries have already said they were pretty happy with the vote......


California Legislature Approves Second Tasting Room Bill

The California State Legislature has approved legislation by Assemblymember Noreen Evans (D-Santa Rosa), Chair of the Assembly Select Committee on Wine, to enable wineries to offer consumers wine by the glass or bottle in a second tasting room while expanding public review in the winery licensure process.

Sponsored by the Wine Institute, Assembly Bill 1470 passed the Assembly 63-0, following a Senate vote of 40-0 for approval. It awaits the governor's signature or veto.

"This is the right bill at the right time to aid one of California's signature industries feeling the pains of our recession," Evans said in a press release. "Fewer tourists are visiting wine country in this era of staycations. This bill helps bring wine to the people by authorizing wineries to conduct new kinds of direct sales to their consumers."

"Wineries are situating their duplicate tasting rooms in locales like San Francisco, San Luis Obispo, Cannery Row in Monterey, Clarksburg in the Delta, and the town of Sonoma, sometimes partnering with one another to provide a broader consumer experience," Wine Institute president and CEO Bobby Koch said in the release. "Assemblymember Evans' legislation is great for wineries and their customers."

AB 1470 has three main components:

• Establishing consistency in how wineries (02 licensees) may sell their wines at locations operating under duplicate licenses as allowed under existing law for their master license.

• Conforming the issuance of duplicate licenses to a 30-day public review period. Such review is not currently part of the issuance process.

• Encouraging responsible wine consumption among wine bar customers by allowing them to take home unfinished bottles of wine, as is currently permitted at restaurants and wineries. The bill applies this "brown bag" privilege to wine bars operating under a standard beer and wine bar (type 42) license or a duplicate winery (type 02) license.


UCBeau
Sep 23, 09, 11:57 pm
I feel this is long overdue but will definitely help out wineries in this state, especially those with larger market presence. Congrats to the CA legislature for finally getting something done.

Kagehitokiri
Sep 27, 09, 8:43 am
have any of the top places (that allow visitors) announced plans to do this?


Eastbay1K
Sep 27, 09, 11:07 am
have any of the top places (that allow visitors) announced plans to do this?

What do you mean by top? Popular? Price? I haven't heard any particular plans at this time.

Kagehitokiri
Sep 27, 09, 11:45 am
of those open to public (IIRC the best arent?) >
best regarded / highest rated / limited production / most expensive / etc

cordelli
Sep 27, 09, 8:14 pm
Over 30 wineries in Washington have second tasting rooms, I would expect the California wineries to follow.

I would expect some to open rooms in places like downtown Napa or even San Francisco, if not the Napa and Sonoma wineries maybe some of the ones a bit off the beaten path that doesn't get too much foot traffic.

I know for example a couple wineries that have second locations but those are only open to club members by appointment, this may allow them to open those to the general public now.

Kagehitokiri
Sep 27, 09, 9:21 pm
I know for example a couple wineries that have second locations but those are only open to club members by appointment, this may allow them to open those to the general public now.

very interesting. ^

cordelli
Sep 27, 09, 10:51 pm
Just to clarify, Open may still be open by appointment, that's a totally different set of regulations. Granted in many cases you can make an appointment at the box at the gate, but the county still requires an appointment.

When in doubt, it's of course always best to drop them a note or a call ahead of time just to be sure you can just show up if you are not sure.



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