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State Pouring $8,000-Plus To Farmington Though ‘Nip’ Bottle Surcharge

FARMINGTON, CT — More than 160,000 “nip” liquor bottles were sold in Farmington since a new law imposing a surcharge on them took effect — and that means more than $8,000 is coming the town’s way for environmental programs through certain wholesalers and the state.

The law took effect Oct. 1 and requires liquor wholesalers to assess a 5-cent surcharge on miniature alcohol bottles to retailers—and in turn, consumers, under a program supervised by the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, the state Department of Revenue Services and the state Department of Consumer Protection.

The charges were then to be filed in a separate account and sent back to the municipalities in which the transactions occurred.

Unlike some other drink containers like bottled water or beer, the surcharge on miniature alcohol bottles, commonly known as “nips,” does not return directly back to the consumer in the form of a bottle deposit, officials said. Instead, towns across the state will “utilize the funds generated by this surcharge to enact environmental measures intended to reduce the generation of solid waste in their municipality or reduce the impact of litter caused by such solid waste,” according to the law.

For the period from Oct. 1, 2021 to March 31, 2022, 163,892 nip bottles were sold in Farmington through a consortium of eight wholesalers, according to statistics provided to Patch by the state Department of Consumer Protection.

That translated to $8,194.60 being designate to go back to the town for environmental programs.

Said state officials when the surcharge was enacted, “Municipalities will receive a check in accordance with the number of nips sold in their town which can be used to address an environmental concern. Whether they choose to use the monies towards clean-ups, drain covers, street sweepers or another conservation-minded initiative, the towns, their residents and our environment will be the better for it.”

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