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Commentary: Ohio craft brewers focused on growing, protecting industry

I gained my interest in craft beer for the same reason most brewers do: a love of beer.

As I learned about the art, the science and the incredible history of beer making, the more interested I became. But one of the major draws for me was — and is — the craft beer community.

I've found an industry that's creative, collaborative and that works hard to delight our customers. I worked with a lot of companies in a lot of industries, and the kind of passion and community that exists in the craft brewing industry is very rare. It's what drives me every day.

Alan Szuter
Alan Szuter

What used to be a small collection of enthusiastic beer lovers has grown exponentially in size and importance since Ohio's first craft breweries opened in the late 1980s. Our state is now home to 393 independent craft breweries, 48 of which opened just last year.

Ohio craft breweries are responsible for $880 million in economic output and employ more than 8,300 people, and by providing inclusive gathering places, volunteering and partnering with local charities, craft breweries have an outsized impact on our communities.

With that increased visibility and growth, we've seen the need for increased advocacy for our industry. We've always had to work hard for rights — to homebrew, to make higher alcohol beers, to expand our premises, to deliver directly to customers — and we've had a lot of success.

The past couple of years in particular have really shown how we can move the ball forward in gaining rights for craft breweries.

Many of these gains could be characterized as a fight against inertia. We're a highly regulated industry: for the past 100 or more years, there's been a lot of legislation created and modified around us, establishing a status quo.

To accomplish much of what we've done, we've mostly had to fight the inertia embedded in that huge body of legislation and regulation that we exist in. That’s generally gone well: People of all backgrounds and politics like beer, and we're an industry that works to include everyone.

It can take a while: The push to solidify federal excise tax reform for small brewers took more than a decade to come to fruition, and that was an initiative that enjoyed broad, bipartisan support.

We'll continue to see the need to fight for those kind of changes, just due to the complex nature of our industry. We have been on a good trajectory lately, passing bills that modernized outdated alcohol laws and helped breweries adjust to the effects of the pandemic.

These efforts are intended not only to ease burdens on Ohio's craft breweries, but also to make the beer marketplace more robust for the consumer.