Maryland Direct Shipping effort loses out, again
A blog posting on The Grand Crew about the failed amendment that would of allowed direct wine shipping in Maryland:
Maryland Direct Shipping effort loses out, again
25 March 2010 by Paul Stagg
Senator Zirkin tried, but failed to
get an amendment passed that would ‘allow’ Maryland residents to receive shipments
of wine, which as of today, is still a legal product.
The move would have upset an uneasy compromise reached
last week between proponents of direct shipping – a majority of the 47
senators – and Sen. Joan Carter Conway, the head of the health
committee and a unwavering opponent of the bill. They agreed to amend a
direct shipping study to Conway’s Winery Modernization Act, a bill
that includes a slate of technical changes to winery law. (Here’s our
latest story on the winery
legislation in the General Assembly, and our longer overview.)
Zirkin’s gambit prompted nearly 30 minutes of debate on the Senate
floor, with some direct shipping proponents urging him to give up his
amendment so as not to scuttle the modernization bill, and others
clamoring for a chance to put the idea to a full-Senate vote.
Sen. Delores G. Kelley, D-Baltimore County, said her office received
more than 900 calls from direct shipping supporters this year.
“I must keep my word and I must support this, because apparently it’s
the only way it will come before us,” Kelley said.
In the end, Zirkin acquiesced to those who asked him to withdraw his
amendment – “I wish you had done that 25 minutes earlier,” Senate
President Thomas V. Mike Miller deadpanned – but not before Sen. Alex X.
Mooney, R-Frederick and Washington, tried to force a vote on the
issue. He took the unusual step of resisting Zirkin’s attempt to
withdraw his own amendment, calling for vote on the motion.
But now, all those people who say they are for direct shipping being
legal don’t actually have to vote on it and put the contributions from
the distributors at risk. Well done, Senate, well done.