Texas Food Deregulation Helps the Little Guy
In recent years, Texas has improved the regulatory climate for craft beer, small home food entrepreneurs, and farmers markets in the state. Can the trend continue?

Last week marked the debut of a new Texas law that will allow vendors at farmers markets to offer food samples and cooking demonstrations to their customers.
If you prefer to treat this as purely good news, be my guest.
But if you're left to wonder something along the lines of, Why the hell didn't Texas law permit vendors to offer food samples and cooking demonstrations in the first place?, then you and I are largely on the same page.
Still, there are two larger points worth making here. First, Texas is hardly alone in having such inane laws on the books. Second, Texas is actually taking major steps to deregulate food sales in the state.
As for the first point, a report commissioned by the nonprofit I lead, Keep Food Legal, and published last year by the Harvard University Food Law and Policy Clinic, found regulations pertaining to farmers markets in several states increased the costs for vendors but provided little if any additional benefit to consumers.
Two years ago I blogged here about a New York State law that effectively served to bar cheesemongers selling at farmers markets from providing potential customers with samples or even cutting cheese to order.
At the time, New York farmers and other vendors lamented that the law would put them out of business by "subjecting them to similar rules as delis or grocery stores," requiring them to have access to running water--an exceedingly difficult and costly proposition for someone selling cheese on the street from atop a folding table.
The controversial New York State law was temporarily rescinded and became the subject of state hearings. The New York law apparently is no longer in force.
Unfortunately, though, it appears the new Texas sampling law may be in the crosshairs of state public health regulators.
"As delicious as those samples may be, health officials are saying the sampling and cooking in farmers markets could be harmful," reports news station KXXV. "This has prompted discussion about possibly regulating farmers markets just like restaurants come 2014."
That would be a terrible step backwards for farmers market vendors and their customers--and for a state that deserves lots of credit for being perhaps the best in the nation in recent years at deregulating food sales by small producers.
I've written recently about tangible steps Texas has taken to deregulate craft beer sellers and other brewers.
The Texas state legislature also deserves credit first for passing a Cottage Food Law and then for revising and improving the law. As I've noted previously, some Cottage Food Laws, state laws permitting people to sell some foods prepared in their homes, are better in theory than in practice. Texas legislators got their state's law wrong the first time around, but then found ways to improve it.
But Texas can still do more.
As I noted in my craft beer column, for example, even after its most recent reforms, the state still does not allow breweries to sell to-go beer growlers to customers.
Texas's deregulatory climate is great for small food businesses and their customers. The state legislature has shown that it can strike down or revise bad laws and pass good ones. Let's hope that trend continues.
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Texas, you disappoint me.
In general, rather than add more new "permissive" laws or revise them, which simply tweaks the list of arbitrarily specific things you may or may not do (what kinds of foods to offer, how much, how they are prepared, how they are offered, etc), what's needed is repeal.
I mean it's very simple and easy and completely effortless. No work to figure out policy; no work for government.
When all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail. And in the case of legislatures, its a fucking sledge hammer, and not one of those fancy claw hammers.
The law isn't a hammer. It's a spiky mace; something that combines the dangerous imprecision of a blunt instrument with the dangerous blood-shedding abilities of a sharp one.
And there is the problem.
It is a slippery slope, I tell ya!
Emphasis is mine.
This was in regards to a recent ban on e-cigs in Duluth, MN
The rash of e-cigarette bans in the US shows unequivocally that those with a tobacco ban boner are not concerned one fucking iota about people's health. These people should be herded together and deposited in Detroit for the good of society.
Exactly. Our state epidemiologist weighed in (couldn't find the exact quote though) to the effect that "We don't have any proof it is harmful, but we should ban it just to be safe."
And as a commenter said in the article, "I thought tobacco smoke was so powerful a whiff of it would sicken you in an outdoor stadium. Now you tell me that you can't tell the difference?"
I like your idea about Detroit internment camps. But have you filed the appropriate environmental impact studies?
"Escape from New York" could be re-imagined and set in Detroit, and audiences would find it perfectly plausible.
OMG, the slippery slope of freedom! Giving people an alternative to smoking will undermine our smoking ban!
Yeah, what's needed is repeal, and I want a pony.
Hostage negotiation. That's all you've got to know.
Compromises need to be crafted. Any move toward freedom is good, no matter how far it leaves you from total freedom. Sometimes complexity in the law is a good way to put together winning coalitions in getting a better compromise than whatever compromise existed previously.
That which is not explicitly permitted is forbidden.
Freedom means asking permission and taking orders.
Actually with the idiotliberals, you are free to do whatever you want so long as it's mandatory.
Well, my wife and the baby are on their way to TN to visit her parents. As heartbroken as I am that I won't be spending the next week with my in laws, life must go on. Anyone read any good sci-fi lately? I have a week so I should be able to knock out a couple of books.
I suggest playing Kerbal Space Progeam instead. Your wife and child will be back before you know it and you will have accomplished exactly nothing all week. A true vacation.
Downloading the demo...
'The Quantum Thief' by Hannu Rajaniemi
'The Night Sessions' by Ken Mcleod
'The Windup Girl' by Paolo Bacigalupi
Last book I really enjoyed was Live By Night by Dennis Lehane. Not scifi, but 30s Irish gangster.
The Wool series by Hugh Howey is fun. The first one is also free to download.
http://www.amazon.com/Wool-Par.....hugh+howey
I've been on a short story bender. Shattered from the Shatterzone franchise was pretty good, as was the Nebula Awards 2002. Orbits 5 not so much.
Before that I was reading Stephen King's Gunslinger series.
"As delicious as those samples may be, health officials are saying the sampling and cooking in farmers markets could be harmful,"
Interactions with the police could be harmful to your health, too. Or your puppy's health.
Get a load of this shit . . .
In the debate concerning vaccines and autism, Medical Daily (a reasonably respectable outlet for medical information) the (clearlhy idiotic statist of an author) author writes:
A libertarian distrust? Voices such as Jenny McCarthy and Jim Carrey are the representatives of libertarian? What. The. Fuck. There is nothing libertarian about ignoring obvious leaps in medical treatments that help eradicate disease, even if the government also supports them (which is the argument).
Goddammit I hate how the media constantly frames libertarianism wrongly. It's almost like they don't know a goddamn thing about it.
Apparently I'm the most evil person my friends and family know, at least according to the media.
They know about it and are scared about it because we refuse to be cowed?
They make their money by selling Nervous Nellies to their advertisers. Not only does this encourage them to make Nelly nervous, it also means you, the self-thinking kind, are not likely to be made nervous, and so they sneer at you as their sworn enemy.
They think all libertarians are the old 1890s style bomb-throwing anarchists. They really don't understand because their entire political woldview was formed by history and "social studies" textbooks that were written from the point of view of big government as savior. For them the truth is that without Upton Sinclair and his ilk, the human race would still be eating poison forced on them by evil capalitalist overlords.
They are incurious in the extreme. And they are the ones that get to sbape the opinions of your fellow citizens.
Incurious doesn't even begin to describe statist fucks.
Why should Libertarianism be different?
It's almost like they don't know a goddamn thing about it.
That's being charitable. It's more like they purposely go out of their way to tar libertarianism as a bunch of wacko birds.
Libertarianism has tended to draw the ultra-paranoid anti-government anti-flouride psycho nuts.
This is why Shrike scores 94 on the libertarian purity test (the 6 is his pro-government side).
Nice.
Ultra paranoid: Every election that the Democrats lose is the result of voter suppression or the vile Kochtopus. Corporations would love nothing more than to murder all their customers.
There are fringe paranoiacs in the libertarian movement, but the Democratic party runs on pure paranoia and delusion. Most anti-flouride activists are leftists as well.
Another bone to pick:
It was one goddamn paper that the press latched onto that created this fucking mess. It wasn't goddamn libertarians; it was the scientifically illiterate mainstream media outlets that pushed the autism story, even after the lancet paper was roundly disproven. It was another "silicone breasts cause every disease" and "audis accelerate by themselves" moment for the stupid partisan fucks that are supposed to provide information to the public: the press.
I remember a quote by a scifi writer about how he would read an article about something sciency and it would be riddled with mistruths, lies and inaccuracies. He then realized that he could never trust those same writers on intricate matters such as the economy or middle east politics or a 1000 page bill coming up for a vote.
There's a book I read many years ago that addresses this. Galileo's Revenge. It's about courtroom junk science, but indicts the media as well.
Michael Crichton:
Briefly stated, the Gell-Mann Amnesia effect is as follows. You open the newspaper to an article on some subject you know well. In Murray's case, physics. In mine, show business. You read the article and see the journalist has absolutely no understanding of either the facts or the issues. Often, the article is so wrong it actually presents the story backward ? reversing cause and effect. I call these the "wet streets cause rain" stories. Paper's full of them.
In any case, you read with exasperation or amusement the multiple errors in a story, and then turn the page to national or international affairs, and read as if the rest of the newspaper was somehow more accurate about Palestine than the baloney you just read. You turn the page, and forget what you know.
That's it.
I don't think there's really an amnesia. Of course everyone who has direct knowledge of even an isolated event knows how badly news reports botch it (and often worse, twist it, for instance to butter somebody up), but it's not like they trust the news reports of things they don't know about to be accurate. Rather, people know they have no choice. That's the point: If it's not something you already know about, how you gonna find out about it? They realize it might well be sloppy, incomplete, twisted, or horse, bull, or chicken shit, but still think it's better than nothing, and on that score they're usually correct. Occasionally a news report is worse than nothing, but you play the odds.
People are nowhere near so credulous as Crichton or Gell-Mann thought. And the people who tell you they put high trust in news reporting? Guess what?they're bullshitting you!
Or they simply can't comprehend the concept of limited government.
Time to quote Bastiat.
It is as if the socialists were to accuse us of not wanting persons to have health care because we do not want the government to control the health care system.
Uh, mad guy?the word "libertarian" was long in use before acquiring the meaning you think it has, and it still has its previous meanings too.
You wanna be like the guys who seize on the meaning "organic" has now in "organic chemistry", and argue with people using the word in its earlier meaning over what's "organic"?
Of course it does.
But we both know damn well that isn't at all what the author was going for. He was going for the meaning that is in common use now.
OT, but WTF:
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau officials are seeking to monitor four out of every five U.S. consumer credit card transactions this year
Do these "officials" have names?
I like that leftists freak out about the NSA spying, but apparently see no problem with the IRS having access to all your medical files or the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau looking at all your credit cards.
NSA spying is terrible because BOOOOOOSH, but those others are okay because KKKAPITULIZMZ!
BTW whatever happened to the penumbra of privacy cited in Roe-v-Wade?
I'm pretty sure the OT is redundant on weekend threads.
So bureaucrats are free to violate black letter law and tell the legislators that created their agency to go fuck themselves.
And some people still claim that the US isn't a police state.
Only four out of five? Why not the other 20%, too?
Now if the good Gov. Rick W. Perry and his cronies would just allow direct Tesla sales in Texas they might not be such hypocrites on regulation.
Tu quoque is all you know, isn't it?
Did you read the article or just leap to reply to the voices in your head? TX is not there yet, just moving in the right direction.
Maybe you would prefer CA or NY or Chicago style stifling regulation instead?
I'd prefer WA-style stifling regulation. Better gun laws than Texas; better gambling laws than Texas; better liquor laws than Texas; better coffee than Texas. As far as I can tell, Texas is big-government-o-rama.
Surprise, some lying scumbag from Mayors Against Legal Guns is on MSNBC.
He blames the KOCHTOPUS! for the recall vote in Colorado. They hatesss America, and they want you to die, preferably from some form of lung disease.
Also. that new background check law stopped violent insane desperadoes from buying guns, and saved hundreds, if not thousands, of lives.
Would you drink hot ginger ale from a can? Coca Cola thinks you will
Mango yogurt noodles, anyone?
FTA:
People would probably eat just about anything in the fall without the crazy marketing schemes too. It seems that it would be an evolutionary biological imperative to eat as much as you can when food is aplenty (immediately after the harvest season) and you're about to enter the time of year when resources are thin. It's called surviving winter, not being taken in by marketing.
This burger chain is also helping you with that imperative too:
http://www.japantoday.com/cate.....-promotion
Fed up with Japanese-sized fast food portions? Tired of ordering a large and getting something that might fit in a happy meal in a North American store? Lotteria's got a fall special that is sure to make any burger enthusiast's day.
Is it for the people who saw the sign outside Wendy's, "HOME OF THE 32-OZ. BIGGIE", and hoped it referred to a hamburger?
They both sound terrif, especially if the ginger ale can is self-heating. Keep the carbonation light in the hot drink, and keep the mango yogurt noodles cold, and with nice soft udon, not al dente.
Pinecone, if you're reading, I WANT THIS PRODUCT concerning each one, max. Can't say I need either, though.
U.S. and Russia announce Syria resolution
Watching liberals admit they're losing on guns is just wonderful.
No. The polls were specifically about ANY background checks not about specific laws and are therefore useless. The goals of the gun controllers seemed moderate and the NRA seemed out of touch...to New York liberals.
They really don't seem to get that the whole country is not New York, and that in much of this country there are a hell of a lot of Democrats who love the NRA and love their guns. Liberals are so ignorant it's unbelievable.
It's "terrible calculus" when conservatives win a particular political battle, and The Will of the People when liberals end out on top.
They understand that democracy is a double edged sword, but can't seem to do anything other than blame some other entity when things don't go their way. It isn't that most people don't favor gun control efforts, it's the NRA and their bullying tactics.
Big City liberals live in the hive and expect that we should all cater to their values because CRIME!!!! Forget that the Commonwealth of KY will have fewer homicide via gun in 5 years than New York will have this year, we all need the same rules.
A lot of these coastal liberals are only vaguely aware of places like Ohio, and that only because some writer that doesn't know any more than they do wrote something about it.
White Guilt run amok.
Show me a place in America where racism "flourishes" and I'll show you a guy who is full of shit.
"But I'm a Jew. My people were slaves several thousand years ago in Egypt." While he was writing, I couldn't resist: "And you know, I'm still waiting for an apology from Egypt."
It seems that he realizes that making people pay for the sins of their ancestors is fucking stupid, but he can't make the connection to his present campaign. Unless he's serious about the Egypt thing. If so, then he's so far off the reservation (har har) as to not to be taken seriously. Another lonely, mad voice railing loudly at dead and deaf injustices. A fucking loon.
The Israelites got compensated by taking spoils from the Egyptians - you take our freedom, we leave and we take your stuff with us, so we're squared. Does he not know this?
Not only that, but the Egypt story is extremely unlikely to be true in even its barest outline. There may have been some Jews in Egypt, but if there was even any slavery there, it was not systematic.
OK, I get how people question the historicity of the Exodus story, but on the grounds that there was no systematic slavery in Egypt? Are we doing a narrow definition of slavery, because I had the impression that there was some form of compulsory labor service, possibly for a majority of the population.
There can never be forgiveness if we do not first admit our mistakes.
Who's this "we" that you are part of that is still racist, Kemosabe?
Because I'm not, and don't have any mistakes to admit.
Racism is a sin for which we have never atoned. It is a grave injustice that must be addressed before we can ever truly move forward as one nation.
Racism as original sin; a good example of progressivism being a religious offshoot of Christianity.
It's a Christianity-substitute, and a lame one at that.
Racism flourishes in the backs of the heads of people that write this kind of bullshit, and they project it onto everyone else.
I'd be the first to admit that we over diagnose illness in this country, but this article seems designed to prime people for Obamacare than to deal with the problem.
The Tea Party is EXTREME. But so is the current leadership!!!
There is no way these guys argue on principle. They just EVUL!
And people wonder why we can't have a civilized political discussion. It's the Republicans' fault!!
TEA BAG IS THE MOVEMENT!
EVUL SEKWESTRASHUN!!!!
"The federal budget cuts known as sequestration." LOL
And if taking away "free" shots was evul enough:
SHPEEPLE ARE GOING TO DIE BECUZ OF SEKWESTRASHUN!!!!!
Linky
I'm thinking that cancelling one of the president's many diplomatic junkets vacations would pay for these shots. But Dear Leader mustn't suffer needlessly.
NRA, Agent of DOOM
Federal legislation expanding background check requirements for gun buyers fell five votes short in the Senate in April, despite political momentum from last December's massacre at a Connecticut elementary school. Gun control backers say they have yet to win a single new Senate supporter, and many worry that the muscle shown by pro-gun groups and voters last week in Colorado will make it even harder to find converts.
"The NRA does its job better than our side does our job," said Jim Kessler, a co-founder of Third Way, which advocates for centrist Democratic policies. "They know how to influence and intimidate elected people."
Those poor, deluded Coloradoans; they probably don't even realize they were victimized by evil mind control rays. If only there were some way to reach them.
It's interesting how they frame it: "he NRA does its job better than our side does our job[.]" As if people are simply automatons that are programmed to to make up our minds based on how a particular message is delivered. I make my decisions, including decisions concerning firearms, based on my own personal needs and wants, not on how some think tank lays out their argument.
It's not that the NRA does it's job better. I don't listen to the NRA either. I use my life experiences to inform my opinions and go from there. Anything else is just background noise that needs to be filtered out.
And politicians aren't afraid of the NRA, they're afraid of their voters kicking them out on their asses because history shows that is EXACTLY what happens when politicians vote in favor of gun control regulations.
Yup. If the NRA started saying that we should have expanded background checks or magazine bans, they'd receive nary a dollar form me ever again.
expanded background checks or magazine bans
The NRA isn't going to go full-Cato anytime soon.
It's interesting how they frame it: "he NRA does its job better than our side does our job[.]"
The interesting part is that he sees gun grabbing as a job - something that is done for monetary gain.
So who's paying him and why?
The ironic thing is that the NRA was late to the game in Colorado. The recall effort was started and largely run by locals who were simply pissed off at their representatives. The NRA didn't step in until it started to look like the it might succeed.
The recall drew national attention and became a proxy fight between gun control and gun rights forces. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, an advocate for stricter gun laws with his group Mayor's Against Illegal Guns, contributed around $350,000 to the two Democrats. The NRA spent roughly the same amount opposing them.
Overall, reported contributions to Morse and Giron totaled around $3 million, giving them a 5-1 advantage over recall supporters. Yet foes of the two state senators found enough angry voters to prevail.
Wait, what?
UNFAIR
The gun manufacturers lobby had ANGER and HATE on their side.
How can modest reasonable common-sense gun safety measures demanded by 90% of the people prevail in a CLIMATE of HATE.
I fear Democracy is broken and our country has become ungovernable.
And now, a word from National Propaganda Radio:
Even in a state that has seen two of the most horrific mass shootings ? Columbine (1999) and Aurora (2012) ? the gun control issue remains fiercely divisive and a topic that is far from settled. The new Colorado laws, which remain on the books, are popular with the general public. But this is a Western state with a strong gun culture. Those voters are active and motivated ? and committed voters trump public opinion, especially in a low-turnout, summertime special election.
Everybody who's not an insane radicalized loser agrees with me, but I am a victim of the tyranny of the minority.
The new Colorado laws, which remain on the books, are popular with the general public.
Which explains why voting for those laws is a political death sentence.
Has anyone actually surveyed Colorado voters on these specific laws?
Has anyone actually surveyed Colorado voters on these specific laws?
Yes. Using cleverly worded polls it was found that 90% of Colorodans agree with the laws.
"Do you think that racist baby murderers should have access to high powered military style weaponry?"
"As delicious as those samples may be, health officials are saying the sampling and cooking in farmers markets could be harmful,"
They "could be harmful", but in comparison, I know that health officials *are harmful*.
No, they want a world without smokers. Or anything that looks like tobacco.
Kinda like the gun banners, have long ago effectively banned full-auto or select-fire military rifles, going after guns that just look like military rifles.
I would go further - it is not about a ban of a particular thing, it is purely the power over others. Dominion over their fellow man is the only thing they want.