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Food Freedom

Will Washington State Become a Friendlier Place for Small Food Entrepreneurs?

Seattle is taking steps in the right direction, but the state legislature is dragging its feet.

Baylen Linnekin | 4.3.2021 8:30 AM

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Yonder | Yonder Bar
(Yonder Bar)

Last month, Seattle's city council voted to lift a host of restrictions on many home businesses, thanks to the efforts of one small local cidery and its supporters.

As I detailed in a February column, after one neighbor complained repeatedly to the city about Yonder Bar, the city forced the "bar"—a converted home garage walkup window where consumers may only purchase cider to drink at home, rather than a place where people drink alcohol beverages—to close temporarily.

As I also explained in the column, the city, which had approved and licensed Yonder Bar prior to its opening, claimed, in closing down the bar, that Yonder Bar was operating illegally in a residential area, didn't have adequate off-street parking, used signage to indicate to consumers that it's a business—and not, say, an unmarked garage full of old tires or broken croquet mallets—and could operate only by appointment.

That might have been the end of the story. But thousands of Yonder Bar's neighbors and at least a couple city councilors rallied behind the takeaway-only bar. Those city councilors introduced a bill that would not just allow Yonder to reopen—but also allow other, similar home-based businesses to operate without fear of being shuttered by the city.

City Council members Dan Strauss and Lorena Gonzalez introduced the bill, dubbed Bringing Business Home, in order to "provide additional support and a means towards economic recovery for small businesses adversely affected by current land use codes during the pandemic."

The bill was intended to lift some of the most onerous home-business requirements, including the appointment-only rule, signage ban, cap on employees, and traffic restrictions.

In my column on Yonder Bar, I cited one local Twitter account that predicted Yonder Bar's persistent nemesis could end "up getting a citywide zoning change that will legalize stuff like Yonder on every lot."

That's largely what happened. Yonder Bar reopened soon after the bill was introduced. And then, rather amazingly, the Bringing Business Home bill passed by an 8-1 vote.

"This bill removes one of the biggest hurdles for small businesses—commercial rent—and gives them the opportunity to follow their dreams," Yonder Bar owner Caitlin Bramm told me this week. "We started Yonder Bar in our garage, and it allowed us to safely and confidently grow while providing valuable cash flow for our business. We are thrilled to have it back open, and can't wait to see what opportunities this bill opens up for others."

"Our land use code cannot be the barrier to vibrant neighborhoods and a strong economy," Councilmember Strauss said after the bill's passage. "It's essential we meet our businesses where they're at: whether that's out of their homes or garages."

Strauss is right. But given that the legislation is only temporary—it's set to expire in a year—the city council still has work to do to ensure Seattle's government isn't a barrier to the success of small food entrepreneurs.

While many small food producers across Washington State face similar restrictions, there's also a movement currently underway to expand opportunities for home food entrepreneurs throughout the state. A bill to legalize microenterprise home kitchens, which passed in the legislature last month and is now before a key state Senate committee, could turn some home-based cooks "into a legitimate industry, fostering entrepreneurs and lowering the barrier to entry into the food industry."

The bill's sponsor, State Rep. Noel Frame, who also hails from Seattle, explained last month that small entrepreneurs "really want to get into the food business but may face pretty big barriers to do so, particularly cost. This is a pathway of opportunity for them that is slightly lower-barrier."

Frame's bill could help bring in from the cold underground food sellers such a "C.," an anonymous seller I contacted (while researching a 2018 column) through Facebook's Marketplace. I subsequently met C. in a Costco parking lot to buy a few of the delectable tamales her mom cooked to help supplement her income.

Unfortunately, even if Frame's bill passes, it's more likely to leave C. and her mom and thousands of other existing and potential home-food entrepreneurs out in the cold than it is to legalize their work.

That's because, as part of a pilot program detailed in the bill, Washington State's largest county—King County, which includes Seattle—may issue no more than 30 permits during the law's first year. Most other counties could offer only 10 such permits. Other restrictions include a cap on the number of meals a seller may offer each day or week. Also, the bill wouldn't take effect until summer 2022.

These limits have unfortunately become a feature of microenterprise home kitchen laws. California, the first state to adopt such a law, has seen its new policy vacillate between flailing and failing, largely because the state left it up to local governments to opt in to the law.

"While a handful of counties and cities have expressed interest in adopting the law in their own jurisdictions, no California city or county save Riverside County—not one—has adopted the law and drafted rules to implement it," I explained in a column last year on the California law's status, dubbing it "nothing more than a cruel illusion."

Seattle city council members deserve credit for recognizing that laws and regulations often act, as Councilor Strauss noted, as a "barrier to vibrant neighborhoods and a strong economy." Washington State lawmakers deserve credit, too, for recognizing that home-based culinary entrepreneurs want and deserve a path to legitimacy.

But until and unless Seattle's home-business law is made permanent, and Washington State's microenterprise home kitchen bill is strengthened, streamlined, and adopted, Washington State food entrepreneurs will likely remain tangled in red tape.

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NEXT: Abolish the FDA

Reason Foundation Senior Fellow Baylen Linnekin is a food lawyer, scholar, and adjunct law professor, as well as the author of Biting the Hands That Feed Us: How Fewer, Smarter Laws Would Make Our Food System More Sustainable (Island Press 2016).

Food FreedomDeregulationSeattle
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  1. Jerryskids   4 years ago

    So some Seattle city councilors are suggesting that it might be a good idea for government to stop handicapping some small businesses and we're supposed to cheer for them? Talk about government breaking your legs and expecting thanks for handing you a crutch.

    1. Mark Thrust, Sexus Ranger   4 years ago

      Seattle is run by a bunch of nut cases so extreme even my communist, Elizabeth Warren loving aunt thinks they’re kooks. The state government in Olympia isn’t much better with the current democrat majorities, and Gov.Inslee is like a slightly watered down version of Gavin Newsom.

      In Spokane, many restaurants and bars shut down over the last year. Some of which had been in business for over forty years. Dozens. Ore on life support.

      It’s all just more conclusive proof that democrats are an existential threat to Their natural enemy, the American citizenry.

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    2. Brason Tay   4 years ago

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  2. Longtobefree   4 years ago

    "provide additional support and a means towards economic recovery for small businesses adversely affected by current land use codes during the pandemic."

    So the city screws them over, and wants a medal for backing of just very slightly. A few paragraphs down we find the facts that make the headline a total lie. Caps on the number of permits, caps on the number of employees; in other words, the "freedom" is just freedom for the city to solicit graft and corruption.

    1. Longtobefree   4 years ago

      of = off

    2. perlhaqr   4 years ago

      Well, they're going to need to carefully vet those microkitckens to make sure they're not making culturally appropriative cuisine.

    3. Brason Tay   4 years ago

      dvrqwv https://medium.com/@zippyreviewoto/sellerspal-review-dr-bfa4c66076aa

  3. Echospinner   4 years ago

    I really can’t stand NIMBYs. One reason I moved was our local HOA became infested with them.

    1. Unicorn Abattoir   4 years ago

      I think all HOAs eventually attract lunatics. Beware of old men with clipboards.

      1. perlhaqr   4 years ago

        Karen Retirement Communities.

    2. Longtobefree   4 years ago

      For mostly a lack of options, I spent a few years in a 'community' with an HOA. Rather than whine, I took the action of getting on the board and changing things. Two years to become president of the board. Nothing frustrates local fascists like reading a copy or Robert's Rules of Order". I am sure that it reverted to type after I finally got a job elsewhere, but it was an interesting study in small group dynamics.

  4. ElvisIsReal   4 years ago

    No. Jay Inslee is determined to kill all small biz.

    1. Mark Thrust, Sexus Ranger   4 years ago

      Indeed. He is an enemy of the people. In bars around the Spokane area people openly and loudly describe in great deal how they would enjoy killing him. Sometimes with a vivid description of how they would torture him first. That’s how much people hate him.

  5. buckleup   4 years ago

    With the number of active socialists in politics, I'm gonna say no.

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  7. harpac   4 years ago

    Will Washington State Become a Friendlier Place for Small Food Entrepreneurs?

    End of column.

    1. harpac   4 years ago

      damn comments section deleted the joke. fudgers

  8. CE   4 years ago

    As my Magic 8 Ball says: "Don't count on it."

  9. Epre1977   4 years ago

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  10. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   4 years ago

    Lorena Gonzalez

    Just so everyone knows, Gonzalez is one of THE most corrupt members of the city council. he fact that she introduced this bill tells me that either she accidentally got lucky or there's something else at play here. She is on record as being openly hostile to businesses in the city, and now she's running for mayor.

    She's passed numerous bills limiting political spending in the city from "foreign influenced companies"-- and all this from a woman who illegally used public funds to fuel her election campaign.

  11. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   4 years ago

    Strauss is right. But given that the legislation is only temporary—it's set to expire in a year—the city council still has work to do to ensure Seattle's government isn't a barrier to the success of small food entrepreneurs.

    Lol

    1. Mark Thrust, Sexus Ranger   4 years ago

      The idea that the Seattle city government will ever take any substantive steps towards making things easier for any small businesses is a pathetic joke. It won’t ever happen. They’re determined to be even more dystopic than San Francisco.

      I can only hope enough non traitors come to the same conclusions I have about the prog menace, so we can destroy them before they destroy us.

      1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   4 years ago

        I can only hope enough non traitors come to the same conclusions I have about the prog menace, so we can destroy them before they destroy us.

        It's too late for Seattle.

  12. Mark Thrust, Sexus Ranger   4 years ago

    OT: zags clinch their advance to the championship with an epic tie breaking three point shot at the buzzer, during overtime.

  13. Minadin   4 years ago

    I remember in ~1995, my dad was starting up his tax & accounting business, and we remodeled our parlour at our house so that it looked like a really nice commercial office.

    To have a home business, we had to go through a whole zoning process that included traffic studies, parking availability analyses, and then came the dreaded public review and comment.

    One of our neighbors was convinced - in defiance of both the parking analyses and parking studies - absolutely convinced - that my dad's clients would clog up the whole street, and everything would be terrible. My dad had no employees, he could only see one client at a time, typically about one client an hour, on a busy day.

    The zoning board and city council ended up rejecting this one neighbor's objections, thankfully. But at least we knew who among our neighbors were the assholes.

    1. Longtobefree   4 years ago

      I bet Halloween was a lot of fun that year - - - - - - - - - - - -

      1. Minadin   4 years ago

        We ran out of TP before it was cool.

  14. JohnZ   4 years ago

    Only if the perspective business owners attend 6 months of woke training and how to exclude whites and make sure no cultural appropriation is present.
    Wanna bet Boeing's decision to shut down the 787 plant in Everett has something to do with the political conditions in the state.
    The only thing missing in Shitattle is the almost daily violence by ANTIFA that is destroying Portland.
    Between Oregon and Washington, the leadership in both states combined equals that of a third world tin pot dictator.
    Seattle is dying: https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=118&v=bpAi70WWBlw

  15. jbsnc   4 years ago

    Small food entrepreneurs have a huge disadvantage they can't come up with big financial support as can the big chains. How many politicians care about fairness when it comes to donations? Voting for politicians of either party is risky.

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