Is the state government ban on coupons to reduce the cost of milk a sign of too much government?
State Sen. Joe Pennacchio (R-Morris) thinks so.
Pennacchieo, a member of the Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee, Thursday called upon the Corzine administration to join 45 other states and abandon the state-enforced ban on retail coupons for milk. Pennacchio has introduced legislation, S-2772, to end the ban. The proposal is pending before the Senate Commerce Committee.
"Any government that is big enough to have its own ‘milk police' to harass grocers who issue milk coupons is too big," Pennacchio said. "New Jersey has no problem letting companies give out coupons for cigarettes. Yet it forbids coupons that reduce the price of milk for middle-class families – this defies common sense.
"The milk coupon ban is an archaic and anti-consumer throwback to a bygone age. If retailers want to reduce the price on milk as part of a larger marketing strategy to get people to shop in their stores, the dead hand of the state government should not drive up prices for consumers, especially during a recession."According to the state Department of Agriculture, the number of dairy farms in New Jersey has fallen by one-half over the last decade to 104. There were 307 dairy farms in New Jersey as recently as 1997, the senator said.
"The milk coupon ban has done nothing to stem the loss of dairy farms in this state," Pennacchio said.
– TOM HESTER SR., NEWJERSEYNEWSROOM.COM

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