Boston Herald

Rhode Island finally hopping to it

Craft beer output thriving after regulation­s are eased

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PROVIDENCE — Vermont produces more craft beer per capita than any other state. Maine ranks third for breweries per capita nationwide. Boston has beer gardens across from City Hall and under an expressway.

But as the high renaissanc­e of craft beer in New England has thrived, Rhode Island has struggled to keep

NEXT BIG THING

up — until now.

There is cause for hoppy optimism in the nation’s smallest state, where lawmakers in 2016 moved to alleviate a harsh regulatory environmen­t for craft beer manufactur­ers. The state could see record growth this year.

Rhode Island saw a higher proportion­al increase in brewery licenses from 2016 to 2017 than any other state besides Oklahoma, according to federal data. The 10 licenses issued are an indication the state’s number of breweries — about 20 — could soon grow rapidly, according to Bart Watson, an economist with the Brewers Associatio­n, a group that tracks the craft beer industry.

“In Rhode Island, we have seen some improvemen­ts,” Watson said.

Friends Donald Greenwood and Andy Sockol were drinking Thursday at Long Live Beerworks in Providence. They are self-proclaimed beer chasers, traveling around New England to hunt for new brews.

Rhode Island is “no longer the black sheep of New England,” Greenwood said.

Both men agreed Rhode Island has vastly improved its beer scene. “It was a market that was definitely ripe,” Greenwood added.

New England has some of the national leaders in the industry. Vermont leads the nation in number of breweries per capita. Maine makes the top 10 of breweries and gallons produced. And New Hampshire reaches the top 20. Connecticu­t is in the middle of the pack nationally, but Rhode Island doesn’t crack the top 30 on any list.

Watson said the Ocean State has the population density and proximity to big cities to support a larger market.

But, Rhode Island’s relatively strict regulation­s have hindered the state in the past, according to Watson. That changed in 2016 when the state increased the amount of beer customers could drink and bring home. Paul DiBiase and Adam Henderson said the looser

laws directly inspired them to trade in their home-brewing kits for a three-barrel system. They’ll launch Beer On Earth in North Kingstown soon.

“When the laws changed to make it more doable — that was kind of when the light bulb went on for me,” DiBiase said.

“Hopefully,” Henderson said, “it’s a good sign of things to come.”

‘When the laws changed to make it more doable — that was kind of when the light bulb went on for me. Hopefully, it’s a good sign of things to come.’

— PAUL DiBIASE, craft brewer

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? POURING IT ON: A craft beer is displayed at Long Live Beerworks in Providence. Rhode Island could see record growth in craft beer production this year, after strict regulation of the industry was alleviated in 2016.
AP PHOTO POURING IT ON: A craft beer is displayed at Long Live Beerworks in Providence. Rhode Island could see record growth in craft beer production this year, after strict regulation of the industry was alleviated in 2016.

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