BILL ANALYSIS Ó ----------------------------------------------------------------- |SENATE RULES COMMITTEE | AB 780| |Office of Senate Floor Analyses | | |(916) 651-1520 Fax: (916) | | |327-4478 | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- CONSENT Bill No: AB 780 Author: Williams (D), et al. Amended: 6/15/15 in Senate Vote: 21 SENATE GOVERNMENTAL ORG. COMMITTEE: 12-0, 6/29/15 AYES: Hall, Berryhill, Block, Gaines, Glazer, Hernandez, Hill, Hueso, Lara, McGuire, Runner, Vidak NO VOTE RECORDED: Galgiani SENATE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE: Senate Rule 28.8 ASSEMBLY FLOOR: 77-0, 5/7/15 (Consent) - See last page for vote SUBJECT: Alcoholic beverages: tied-house restrictions: on-sale retailers advertising SOURCE: Author DIGEST: This bill makes clarifying and conforming changes to existing provisions of the Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) Act relating to the listing of on-sale and off-sale retailers as a thing of value in order to enable licensees to connect with each other for normal commercial purposes. ANALYSIS: Existing law: 1)Establishes the Department of ABC and grants it exclusive authority to administer the provisions of the ABC Act in accordance with laws enacted by the Legislature. AB 780 Page 2 2)Separates the alcoholic beverage industry into three component parts, or tiers, (referred to as the "tied-house" law or "three-tier" system), of manufacturer (including breweries, wineries and distilleries), wholesaler, and retailer (both on-sale and off-sale). The original policy rationale for this body of law was to: (a) promote the state's interest in an orderly market; (b) prohibit the vertical integration and dominance by a single producer in the market place; (c) prohibit commercial bribery and to protect the public from predatory marketing practices; and, (d) discourage and/or prevent the intemperate use of alcoholic beverages. Generally, other than exceptions granted by the Legislature, the holder of one type of license is not permitted to do business as another type of licensee within the three-tier system. 3)Prohibits, in general, an alcohol manufacturer, wholesaler, or any officer, director, or agent of any such person from owning, directly, or indirectly, any interest in any on-sale license, or from providing anything of value to retailers, be it free goods, services, or advertising. 4)Provides that the listing of the names, addresses, telephone numbers, email addresses, or Internet Web site addresses, of two or more unaffiliated off-sale retailers selling beer, wine, or distilled spirits and operating and licensed as bona fide public eating places selling the beer, wine, or distilled spirits produced, distributed, or imported by a nonretail industry member in response to a direct inquiry from a consumer, as specified, does not constitute a thing of value or prohibited inducement to the listed off-sale retailer, if specified conditions are met. 5)Includes similar provisions applicable to on-sale licensed premises, except that those provisions also extend the exception described in item #4 above to others forms of "electronic" media. 6)Defines an on-sale license as authorizing the sale of all types of alcoholic beverages: namely, beer, wine and distilled spirits, for consumption on the premises (such as at a restaurant or bar). An off-sale license authorizes the sale AB 780 Page 3 of all types of alcoholic beverages for consumption off the premises in original, sealed containers. This bill: 1)Consolidates two similar tied-house exceptions (one pertaining to on-sale retailers and the other to off-sale retailers) which authorize the dissemination of information pertaining to the retail availability of products by alcoholic beverage producers, distributors or importers in response to direct inquiries from consumers. 2)Eliminates the requirement that the dissemination of information be in response to a direct inquiry from a consumer, thus broadening the exception. 3)Includes brandy manufacturers and rectifiers within the definition of non-retail industry member. 4)Contains boiler plate language (legislative findings and declarations) relative to the necessity of requiring a separation between manufacturing interests, wholesale interests, and retail interests in the production and distribution of alcoholic beverages. 5)Makes other minor conforming changes. Background Tied-house laws. Tied-house refers to a practice in this country prior to Prohibition and still occurring in England today where a bar or public house, from whence comes the "house" of tied house, is tied to the products of a particular manufacturer, either because the manufacturer owns the house, or the house is contractually obligated to carry only a particular manufacturer's products. Existing tied-house laws generally prohibit a manufacturer, importer or wholesaler from furnishing, giving, or lending any money or other thing of value to any person engaged in operating, owning, or maintaining any off-sale or on-sale licensed retail premise. Existing law also provides two separate tied-house exceptions (one pertaining to on-sale retailers and the other to off-sale retailers) relative to the AB 780 Page 4 listing of a licensed retailer as a thing of value or prohibited inducement. Purpose of AB 780. According to the author's office, this bill is intended to provide small distillers, brewers, and wineries with an additional tool to promote their businesses. The author's office contends that social media is a free form of advertisement to the public; therefore, it should not be subject to the traditional notion of advertising as a "gift" under current tied-house laws. The author's office emphasizes that AB 780 will provide greater flexibility and protect the ability of specified alcohol interests to engage in social media communications with consumers, while preserving the original intent of the tied-house law of prohibiting gifts of advertisement from alcoholic beverage producers, distributors or importers. Prior/Related Legislation SB 327 (Hall, 2015) consolidates two similar tied-house exceptions within the ABC Act which authorize the dissemination of information pertaining to the retail availability of products by alcoholic beverage producers, distributors or importers in response to direct inquiries from consumers. (Pending on the Assembly Floor) AB 973 (Gray, 2015) consolidates two similar tied-house exceptions within the ABC Act which authorize the dissemination of information pertaining to the retail availability of products by alcoholic beverage producers, distributors or importers in response to direct inquiries from consumers. (Pending on the Senate Floor) AB 2349 (Nestande, Chapter 374, Statutes of 2012) provided that the listing of names, addresses, telephone numbers, or email addresses in other forms of electronic media do not constitute a thing of value. SB 1096 (Wiggins, Chapter 285, Statutes of 2010) revised the direct inquiry provisions in the ABC Act pertaining to the authority of producers, wholesalers and importers to respond to consumer inquiries as to where their products may be found to AB 780 Page 5 include any "electronic" inquiries from consumers. SB 1423 (Chesbro, Chapter 205, Statutes of 2000) authorized wineries and brandy manufacturers to advertise the name and location of restaurants that sell their products. SB 1233 (Chesbro, Chapter 666, Statutes of 1999) allowed for the limited dissemination of information regarding the off-sale availability of alcoholic beverages. FISCAL EFFECT: Appropriation: No Fiscal Com.: Yes Local: No SUPPORT: (Verified 8/7/15) Ascendant Spirits, Inc. California Craft Brewers Association Family Winemakers of California Wine Institute OPPOSITION: (Verified 8/7/15) None received ARGUMENTS IN SUPPORT: Proponents contend that this bill is a "win-win-win for wineries, consumers, and retailers. It would remove for wineries, other suppliers, and wholesalers the awkwardness of only reacting to consumer inquiries. The information would be able to be routinely posted on the business' website or other forms of social media, which provides easy access for interested consumers. This information could drive business to retailers carrying the supplier's or wholesaler's products." Additionally, proponents argue that AB 780 "recognizes the exponential progress in how consumers communicate and find products on-line. It allows wineries to affirmatively communicate where their wines are available without being asked. This helps in a highly competitive marketplace where the sale of non-California wine is projected to capture 43% of all sales AB 780 Page 6 in the United States, according to a new Gomberg-Fredrickson report." ASSEMBLY FLOOR: 77-0, 5/7/15 AYES: Achadjian, Alejo, Travis Allen, Baker, Bigelow, Bloom, Bonilla, Bonta, Brough, Brown, Burke, Calderon, Chang, Chau, Chávez, Chiu, Chu, Cooley, Cooper, Dababneh, Dahle, Daly, Dodd, Eggman, Frazier, Beth Gaines, Gallagher, Cristina Garcia, Eduardo Garcia, Gatto, Gipson, Gomez, Gonzalez, Gordon, Gray, Grove, Hadley, Harper, Holden, Irwin, Jones, Jones-Sawyer, Kim, Lackey, Levine, Linder, Lopez, Low, Maienschein, Mathis, Mayes, McCarty, Medina, Melendez, Mullin, Nazarian, Obernolte, O'Donnell, Olsen, Patterson, Perea, Quirk, Rendon, Ridley-Thomas, Rodriguez, Salas, Santiago, Mark Stone, Thurmond, Ting, Wagner, Waldron, Weber, Wilk, Williams, Wood, Atkins NO VOTE RECORDED: Campos, Roger Hernández, Steinorth Prepared by:Arthur Terzakis / G.O. / (916) 651-1530 8/18/15 17:03:37 **** END ****