Senate Bill 4-18 was introduced by Senator Victoria Sullivan to address what she and witnesses described as municipal overreach in Manchester after an incident—widely referred to in testimony as "Picklegate"—in which a resident received a cease-and-desist letter for sharing homemade pickles.
Sullivan told the committee the constituent never sold a jar and that the incident highlighted inconsistent municipal rules that can conflict with the state's Homestead Food Act. "For the record, he never sold a jar of pickles," Sullivan said, recounting the public reaction and subsequent attention.
Supporters including Daniel Mowery (the resident involved) and Chrissy Kantor (Manchester Ward 6 Alderman) urged the committee to pass SB418 to align city rules with state standards, arguing the change would reduce confusion and allow small-scale homestead activity such as jams, pickles and baked goods to be offered in local markets without disparate municipal barriers. "Adopting the state's homestead standards would support small start-up businesses," Kantor said.
Sarah Scott of Americans for Prosperity testified that aligning municipal rules with the state would help keep markets vibrant and remove unnecessary barriers to small entrepreneurs. Mowery, who described his own pH testing and canning practice, said the city's enforcement action felt "overreaching."
The committee closed the hearing on SB418; no vote was taken.