from SLATE:
Minnesota Shutdown Forces Beer Recall
No "silver bullet" for budget impasse as Miller-Coors pulls products.

By Will Oremus | Posted Wednesday, Jul. 13, 2011, at 2:31 PM EDT

Minnesota’s government shutdown has entered a sobering new phase.

Two weeks after the state’s political leaders missed a deadline to
resolve their differences over the budget, the state’s Public Safety
Department told local reporters that the beer conglomerate
Miller-Coors would be forced to pull its wares from stores statewide.
It seems the country’s second-largest beer conglomerate neglected to
renew the paperwork required to distribute its 39 brands of cold ones
within the state before the July 1 shutdown (a claim company reps
dispute). Now it’s too late.

The casualties include not only Miller and Coors but summer favorite
Blue Moon, street-corner staple Olde English, and the delicious
high-end Czech import Pilsner Urquell. But that’s not all, the Duluth
News Tribune reports. Hundreds of bars and liquor stores in the state
are in peril of running out of booze altogether because the “buyer’s
cards” required to purchase alcohol expired at the end of June.

“We’re talking about millions of dollars at stake here that can never
be made up,” Frank Ball, executive director of the Minnesota Licensed
Beverage Association, told the News Tribune. “We’ve got businesses
that are about to close their doors if they can’t buy beer to sell.”

If this doesn’t renew the state’s legislators’ thirst for
negotiations, it’s hard to fathom what will. So far the closure of
state parks and highway rest stops, a spectrum of suspended government
services, and the furlough of over 20,000 state workers have all
failed to bring Republicans and Democrats back to the table. The
parties are divided on how to close a $5 billion deficit in the
state’s two-year budget.

State troopers and prison guards remain on duty, and courts are still
open, for what that’s worth.

The shutdown, the state’s second in six years, is the longest in
recent memory in the United States, Reuters asserts. Its troubles loom
as a cautionary tale for leaders in Washington as talks over raising
the debt ceiling drag on.
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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