A reminder from Joyce about the Terry Theise tasting next week.
Also, an article about inter-state wine shipping.
Some of us are going to Campiello for the Henn-Lake tasting.
Has anyone seen the tent? This was a very big and somewhat
crowded event at the Calhoun Beach Club.
Cheers,
Jim
----- Forwarded message from jhegstrom(a)csom.umn.edu -----
Subject: Terr y Theise - June 16 - 6:30-9:30
To: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
Cc: wine(a)thebarn.com, wine-bounce(a)thebarn.com
From: jhegstrom(a)csom.umn.edu
Date: Fri, 14 May 2004 08:23:05 -0500
Greetings!
If you haven't already heard Terry Theise will be returning in June. Once
again, Surdyk's is allowing me to offer a discounted ticket price of $25 if
you sign up with the "Joyce Hegstrom/Bubbles" group.
To take advantage of this, you need to call Karen Blakeman at the store
(612) 379-3232 and indicate to her that you are with my group.
Hope to see you there!
Joyce
Terry Theise German Wine Tasting (99391)
Sample some of the finest wines Germany has to offer. If you haven't
been to a Terry Theise tasting, you're in for a treat; if you have, you
already know!
Held at the Milennium Hotel - 1313 Nicollet Mall, Minneapolis
You can now make your reservation on-line!
Surdyk's Price: $27.00
MATTERS OF TASTE
The wine shipping news
David Shaw
June 9, 2004
Supporters of laws that ban wineries from shipping directly to consumers in many states .
especially wholesalers who now act as middlemen and would like to have all wine sales
continue to go through them . invoke all manner of justification for their position. They
say they're trying to abide by the United States Constitution and to ensure that
appropriate sales taxes are collected and, above all, to help states "protect their
communities . [and] safeguard their children . " as Juanita Duggan, president and CEO
of the Wine & Spirits Wholesalers of America, said when the U.S. Supreme Court agreed
last month to hear two cases that involve direct shipping.
Right. When all else fails, invoke those poor, helpless kids. If the Supreme Court rules
against Duggan and her allies, I can just see all those impatient 14-year-olds e-mailing
their orders to Napa and waiting three weeks for their Screaming Eagle to arrive.
When the Supreme Court takes up this case later this year, justices will be reviewing just
two states' laws, but their ruling could affect all 24 states that now forbid direct
sales to consumers. These states essentially rely on the 21st Amendment, which repealed
Prohibition but threw a legislative bone to the temperance movement by giving states broad
authority to regulate the sale of alcoholic beverages within their borders.
I hope the court throws all those states' laws out the window. I hope the justices
rule that wineries in California and elsewhere can ship their wines directly to consumers
in every one of the 50 states.
A Federal Trade Commission study last year said consumers could save "as much as 21%
on some wines" if they were able to buy them directly from the wineries. That's
why wholesalers oppose the change; they'd lose money if wineries could bypass them
and ship directly to individual consumers.
Although consumers in California probably wouldn't be greatly affected by such a
decision . at least not directly . it's still a huge issue here. California is by far
the biggest wine-producing state in the country, accounting for two-thirds of the
nation's wine sales. All the other states combined produce only about 7% of the wine
consumed in the United States.
West Coast arrangement
California residents can buy directly from California's more than 850 wineries . just
as residents in other states can buy directly from wineries in their states . and
California also has reciprocal agreements with Oregon and Washington that permit wineries
in each of these states to sell to customers in the other two.
I don't want to be chauvinistic, but I have to say that with all those fine
California, Oregon and Washington wines already available, I really don't see a
significant number of Californians suddenly spending a lot of money to buy the wines of,
say, New York, Ohio and Texas.
But a favorable Supreme Court ruling would allow residents of California . or any other
state . to call a California winery and order wine as a gift to be sent to a friend or
relative or business acquaintance in another state.
Would opening new domestic markets for California wines mean that consumers in California
might have more trouble finding the California wines they want . or have to pay more for
them?
"No," says Rich Cartiere, editor and publisher of the Calistoga-based Wine
Market Report. "There's plenty of California wine available, and there's
too much competition among too many brands, California and foreign imports, many of them
being offered at discount prices, for California wineries to get away with raising
prices."
Direct shipping throughout the country could be an enormous windfall for California
wineries, though, simply because they could sell more wine to more customers. This should
make the wineries healthier, and since the wine industry contributes $33 billion to the
state's economy, the state's economy should get healthier too.
But that's not why I favor eliminating the ban on direct shipping. The ban just seems
discriminatory to me. Over the years, the Supreme Court has generally interpreted the
Commerce Clause in the U.S. Constitution in ways that limit such state-by-state
discrimination . "economic Balkanization," the court called it in another case .
and I hope the justices will do likewise now.
If I lived in New York (or Michigan) . the two states whose bans are the basis of the
pending Supreme Court case . why should I only be able to direct-order wines made in New
York (or Michigan)? Why shouldn't I be able to buy by phone, online or through the
mail any wine from California and Oregon and Virginia and any other state that makes wine
that appeals to me? And why shouldn't wineries be able to sell to anyone, anywhere,
who wants to drink their wines and is willing to pay for them?
Even a favorable Supreme Court ruling wouldn't allow foreign wineries to ship
directly to customers in the U.S. because federal import and customs regulations, not
state laws, prevent that.
But if, like me, you tend to root for the underdog . the little guy . in most situations,
there's another reason to hope the Supreme Court overturns the direct shipping ban
within the United States.
Big fish, little fish
The big wineries, in California and elsewhere, can survive under the current system. They
may not like it. They may be able to make even more money if the system is changed. But at
least they're in the game.
The biggest 25% of the country's almost 3,000 wineries sell more than 80% of the
wines consumed nationwide, and wholesalers are happy to work with them. Most wineries are
small, family-owned operations, though, with volume so slight that wholesalers don't
find their business worth taking.
These wineries get shut out of interstate sales altogether under the current system; they
can't ship directly to consumers, and they can't ship indirectly, through
wholesalers. Collectors and casual drinkers alike should have direct access to these
wines.
Direct sales from wineries to consumers are a relatively small piece of the wine pie at
present, accounting for only $200 million of last year's $18 billion in total wine
sales. But that number would increase significantly if wineries could sell directly to
consumers everywhere.
The Supreme Court should make that possible.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
David Shaw can be reached at david.shaw(a)latimes.com. To read previous "Matters of
Taste" columns, please go to
latimes.com/shaw-taste.
----- End forwarded message -----
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