March 2016
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Buying and selling local foods just got easier Hudson Hill reads your rights under the Food Freedom Act The Wyoming legislature passed the Food Freedom Act in 2015. This bill is unlike any other legislation in the country in that it deregulates aspects of purchasing local food. The bill has created controversy, but one thing that can be said with certainty is the legislation changes the way producers and consumers of local food interact. The purpose of the bill “is to allow for the sale and consumption of homemade foods and to encourage the expansion of agricultural sales by farmers markets, ranches, farms and home-based
producers and accessibility for the same to informed consumers.”
• The transaction can only be for home consumption.
The concept is pretty easy to understand. If producers wants to sell products at a farmers market or on a farm or ranch, they can. Buyers must be an “informed consumer,” meaning they understand the product they are buying has not been inspected or passed any inspection processes.
• The transaction can only occur in Wyoming.
Here are the rules of the bill:
The bill serves three purposes:
• The transaction must be between the producer and the informed end-consumer.
• Allows an informed end-consumer to purchase agricultural products through farmers markets or on a ranch or farm.
• The transaction cannot involve interstate commerce. • The transaction does not include all meat products.
• Allows sale and purchase of poultry products consistent with others rules. • Allows an informed end-consumer to purchase raw milk from a producer for home consumption. For decades, citizens have been moving away from the farm and becoming disconnected from their food sources. More recently, people have been trending back to a desire for some connection with their food and wanting to understand where and how it is produced. March 2016
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