Senator Dale M. Volker Announces Passage Of Direct Wine Shipments

William T. Stachowski

Senator Dale M. Volker (R-C-I, Depew) announced approval of legislation (S.5731), to authorize the direct shipment of wine into and out of New York State. The bill reflects a three way agreement between the Senate, the Governor, and the Assembly.

"Our state’s winemakers produce some of the finest wines in the entire nation and have received national and international acclaim," said Senator Dale M. Volker. "It is extremely important for our wine producers to have access to the free market in order for them to expand their markets, provide out-of-state customers access to their products, and protect and enhance their presence in this important segment of our state’s economic fabric."

The legislation will put in place the necessary regulatory, reporting and revenue-collecting systems to ensure an effective and responsible transition to a new system of marketing and selling wine in New York.

The legislation will:

continue to allow New York State wineries and farm wineries to make shipments to in-state customers, but limit those shipments to 36 cases annually;

establish reciprocal wine shipping privileges between New York and other states. This would enable wine manufactured by licensed New York wineries and farm wineries to be shipped to individual customers in other states that have reciprocal direct shipping statutes. These out-of-state wineries would then be authorized to ship wine directly to customers in New York State. The legislation imposes a limit on the amount of wine that can be shipped to any individual customer to 36 cases-per-year;

require out-of-state shippers to obtain a license from the New York State Liquor Authority and adhere to strict reporting requirements and regulations when carrying and delivering wine into New York. Direct shipments could only be made to individual adult consumers in New York, for personal use only. Proposed regulations would require carriers to obtain the signature of a person over 21 years old at the delivery address; and

subject all wine shipped from New York to the payment of all New York alcoholic beverage taxes. Wine shipped into New York would be subject to the payment of all state and local sales taxes and excise taxes.

Legislative action on the issue comes following a landmark U.S. Supreme Court ruling last month, which struck down a New York law that barred out-of-state wineries from directly shipping their wine to New York residents. It also recognizes the constraints that the State's law has placed on New York's wineries ability to conduct business in other states. New York is the third-largest wine producing state in America, with 218 wineries statewide. The industry employs 18,000 workers and annually generates more than $500 million in gross sales, together with $85 million in state and local tax revenue.

It’s been estimated that authorizing direct shipments would raise as much as $3.8 million a year in increased revenues for New York State.