New Jersey Cracks Down on Breweries for Hosting Trivia Nights, Serving Food
Regulations ban food sales, limit the number of events, and include other inane requirements.

Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, New Jersey refused to allow breweries to deliver their brews to people's houses, even though taprooms were forced to close on account of stay-at-home orders. Now, state regulators are primed to deliver the coup de grâce in their anti-beer campaign.
On July 1, the state's Division of Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) finally implemented its long-delayed, long-dreaded "special ruling" on craft breweries. First proposed in 2018, the rules caused an immediate firestorm in the local brewing community and were temporarily withdrawn. Re-introduced in 2019, the rules were scheduled to go into effect in 2020 but were suspended when COVID-19 hit.
The rules themselves are almost beyond parody. The headline restriction is that breweries will be limited to hosting a mere 25 on-premise "special events" per calendar year. What constitutes a special event? Pretty much anything you can imagine, so long as it's advertised and promoted, including beer yoga classes, trivia nights, or even a brewery deciding to broadcast a championship sporting event on its TVs.
If an event is not promoted or advertised, it apparently does not count against the 25-event cap, although it's unclear why a brewery would bother hosting weekly trivia if it can't tell its customer base when to show up.
Restricting such events puts a damper on potential on-premise taproom sales, undermining the brewery's ability to act as a community hub and gathering place. The event cap also disproportionately punishes the most vulnerable members of the state's brewing community, since many small microbreweries and nanobreweries exclusively sell beer from their on-premise taprooms, eschewing distribution to stores or bars altogether.
Breweries are also restricted to hosting 52 "private parties" per year, such as birthday parties or corporate events. But the New Jersey ABC makes clear that it will allow patrons attending a private party to bring their own beer and wine to the events. Why a brewery would want to host a party where someone else's beer is served goes unexplained. All events, whether they are a "special event" or a "private party," must be manually entered onto the DABC website at least 10 days in advance.
The rules add teeth to a previously implemented but rarely enforced requirement that breweries provide tours to all taproom guests before they sell them any beer. In another apparent effort to seem reasonable, the state regulator clarifies that the tour rule only requires one tour per year, per customer, meaning that frequent customers only have to go on one tour every 12 months—provided that the brewery keeps an updated list on hand of everyone who has recently completed a tour.
The rules also forbid breweries from selling food or hosting food trucks on-site. Breweries are barred from any attempts to "collaborate or coordinate" with food trucks, even if the trucks are parked off-site. Apparently the New Jersey ABC, which lists as its mission "foster[ing] moderation and responsibility in consumption of alcoholic beverages," wants New Jerseyans to consume their alcohol on an empty stomach. And just to make sure that it leaves no stone unturned, the new rules also prohibit breweries from making or selling coffee on-site.
All of these restrictions seem specially designed to punish breweries. Some restaurateurs and bar owners in New Jersey view the state's burgeoning craft brewing industry as a threat to their bottom lines and have therefore lobbied state regulators to severely curtail the taproom business of breweries.
Although such cronyist impulses may be hard to sympathize with, it is worth noting that Garden State restaurants suffer under their own needlessly punitive rules too. Namely, New Jersey has strict population quotas for liquor licenses, meaning that many restaurants are unable to obtain a license to sell alcohol at all. Those bars and restaurants that are able to obtain a license are oftentimes forced to cough up anywhere from a few hundred thousand dollars to over a million dollars to secure one.
Given the immense cost, restaurants and bar owners are incentivized to jealously guard these licenses and to limit competition from breweries, which only have to pay $1,250 annually for their licenses.
But the state has administered the wrong medicine for a disease of its own making. It has taken one bad government policy (restrictive population quotas for restaurant liquor licenses) and tried to address the unintended consequences of that policy by enacting yet more bad government policy (punitive new brewery regulations).
The state should instead scrap its new brewery rules and remove its longstanding liquor license quota. In other words, both brewery and restaurant alcohol licenses could cost around $1,250, which is closer to other neighboring states. If existing restaurant owners balk that they were forced to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars for a liquor license under the old regime, then the state can offer them a tax credit to compensate for the previous misbegotten government policy.
Whenever government creates a market inefficiency and hurts well-meaning businesses, it often pretends like the only answer is more government. New Jersey lawmakers should reverse this one-way government ratchet and deregulate the state's alcohol markets across the board.
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“The government is good at one thing. It knows how to break your legs, and then hand you a crutch and say, 'See if it weren't for the government, you wouldn't be able to walk.”
― Harry Browne
In New Jersey lots of people know how to break legs.
I know a guy that can get you a burger with your IPA in the pine barrens. But one day he may ask you for a favor.
But only government agents are allowed to break legs.
It's nice to see the bureaucrats aren't even pretending that these regulations are for our own good. Now they're just openly fucking with these poor bastards. I guess a lot of times the whole point of having power is wielding it. If there be a hell, these sonsabitches deserve to burn there for eternity.
Gotta protect the existing restaurants who donated to the politicians in question. Or, being New Jersey, more likely someone made the ABC board an offer they can't refuse to crack down on independent breweries, because it would take a lot of leg work (or knee work) to bring them all into the family.
jeebus, idiots do you even New Jersey? grease the correct wheels.
I'll bet that these people in government who are doing their best to stifle economic activity really believe they are doing the opposite.
The governor is a former Goldman Sachs exec. Companies with revenues below $5B don't matter.
Fuck Phil Murphy.
Was New Jersey suddenly taken over by Southern Baptists? This is insane.
No, you're just suddenly realizing the oppressive nature of progressive policies.
It's pretty consistent with New Jersey's politics. I'm not sure there is really much good to speak of for it. It's just a nanny state, basically. Very wealthy. Erecting little model gardens.
NYC banned (maybe still does) dancing in most bars. This kind of shit is not the sole province of religious zealots.
Indeed. I am pleased that in North Carolina, the Southern Baptist Taliban and the Cronyist ABC has lost some control over alcohol sales:
New changes to North Carolina alcohol laws allow public drinking, online purchases
Evan Moore
https://www.charlotteobserver.com/news/article263281678.html
Now wineries and distilleries cqn sell liquor, not just ABC Stores, and they can now sell on Sunday!
Online sales and limited take-out of mixed drinks are legal, customers can buy in 2-loter and 4-liter growlers, and college sports vendors can now sell doubles!
Ah, The South is rising in a good way...on bubbles of embibery and spirits! 🙂
Poor Joisey Citizen-Subjects should watch and learn!
This is nothing but cronyism. I go to alot of great small breweries in NJ. These regulations are going to hurt entrepreneurs. Hopefully, the brewers will be able to unofficially collaborate with nearby restaurants to allow patrons to order food for delivery.
Someone needs to contact the institute for Justice.
I can’t wait to see how the usual apologist for the administrative state explain the “rational basis” behind these regulations.
I knew that the explosion of microbreweries in New Jersey was too good to be true. It’s New Jersey, where nothing good ever lasts.
PS - If you’re in the area, try the source farmhouse brewery in Colts neck, on route 34 S.
Sounds like The Boss is "Art Imitating Life."
Bruce Springsteen - Atlantic City ( Lyrics + HQ )
https://youtu.be/rljzmajB6jk
Given the opportunity, Democrats will always go with cronyism and fucking over small businesses.
NJ is full of the most retarded people I've ever met in my life. Can't wait to get out of this fuck hole.
If you figure these regulations in New Jersey differ substantially from regulations in Republican-controlled states, you don't know much about alcohol beverage regulation.
Disaffected, anti-government, right-wing cranks are welcome to rant ignorantly at this site, however, because low-grade partisan polemics from faux libertarians are the standard here.
all states have their cozy schemes to protect their pals and patrons from the evils of the free market. capitalism is best when we get to keep other capitalists out once we're in.
Shorter Kirkland: BOWF SIDEZ, BIGOT.
If you are a fan of alcoholic beverage regulation, start with reegulating your own alcoholic beverage consumption.
Carry On, Toilet Bowl Clinger!
this silly BS arises from when prohibition era schemes to protect the distributors were enacted. there are countless state and local equivalents. time for ALL of them to be eliminated. when i see the IJ in on this i have $500 for the cause
Good! NJ should get the kind of government they voted for, good and hard!
Any possibility the craft brewer could sue the state successfully?
Why anyone lives in this leftist, communistic shithole run by DICKtator Murphy is beyond me.
*barf*
It's on-premises, you half-wit. FFS, you write for a living. Build your vocabulary!
"beer yoga classes"
What on earth?
Ah, it actually exists, there's an article on it in Wikipedia.
Keep in mind that it is illegal to pump your own gas in New Jersey.
That's what you get for staying on New Jersey after 2020.
One could make a very strong argument that breweries making “home deliveries” would actually prevent many driving deaths and injuries. Fewer drunk drivers. Since Alcohol Prohibition was overturned in the USA, seems like these laws could be easily overturned using constitutional lawsuits.
I live in NJ but have not gone to a brewery in the state. I have gone to wineries. I do in NY state all the time and I usually order food. After reading this I looked up the menu at several local breweries and yep, NO FOOD. So we can just sit there and pound beers and not eat!
And they're all Democrats, so it's impolite to protest in front of their homes.
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