Some Federal Agencies Are Actually Getting More Efficient
With the Department of Government Efficiency aiming to reduce the size and scope of the federal bureaucracy, the Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) has not been immune. The agency recently reported a 13 percent reduction in its workforce since last year. While much of this appears to have come in the form of “voluntary resignations,” it’s clear that many of DOGE’s policies are directly targeted at encouraging such attrition.
The TTB is the primary federal regulatory body responsible for alcohol. The bulk of alcohol regulation has taken place at the state and local level since the end of Prohibition, but the feds have kept their hands in the pie through this agency, which oversees myriad tax issues, trade practice rules, and a label approval regime that determines what illustrations you’re allowed to see on your favorite beer can.
Under the TTB’s pre-approval process, the agency has to sign off on the labels that attach to alcohol bottles and cans before those products hit the market. This contrasts with the Food and Drug Administration’s system for food labels on non-alcoholic items, which polices label infractions only after products go on sale.
Speaking remotely to a recent Napa Va
Article from Reason.com
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