Connecticut‘s five-cent surcharge on bottles 50 mL or smaller—most folks call them “nips”—has quietly redirected revenue to towns. It’s also sparked a heated debate over litter, public safety, and who really gets to call the shots locally.
This blog digs into how the program works, which communities have gained the most, and who’s shaping the policy discussion in 2024 and 2025.
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How the Nip Surcharge Works Across Connecticut
Since late 2021, every nip-sized alcohol bottle sold in Connecticut comes with a five-cent fee. That money goes straight to the town where the sale happens.
Revenue depends on how many stores a town has and how many bottles they sell. Bigger cities and towns with more liquor stores often see higher totals.
Between 2024 and 2025, the program brought in about $4.9 million statewide. New Haven collected around $242,298 and Hartford pulled in more than $181,000.
So, the size of the town and the number of stores really matter for how much money a community gets.
The law says towns should spend this money on environmental projects. That could mean hiring recycling coordinators, running Earth Day events, or buying street sweepers to clear up the bottles that end up on the roads.
Where the Revenues Go
- Environmental programs and staff, like recycling coordinators
- Earth Day and litter-prevention events for community involvement
- Equipment and infrastructure—think street sweepers and bottle-cleaning attachments
- Municipal planning and outreach to tackle bottle litter, especially in busy areas
Even with these efforts, people still worry about litter, water pollution, and public drinking. Cities such as Stamford, Bridgeport, Waterbury, Norwalk, Danbury, and Greenwich are watching closely as they figure out how to use the funds.
Debate Over Nips: Litter, Public Safety, and Local Control
The conversation has environmental and public-safety advocates on one side. On the other, industry groups want to protect revenue for towns and keep local control strong.
Advocates highlight the litter and water pollution from nips. They say these tiny bottles point to bigger consumption issues that towns need to address.
Two Proposed Bills
- Let municipalities ban nips within their borders, giving them a direct way to fight bottle litter.
- Make nips part of the state bottle redemption program, which doesn’t include them now. That could change how people recycle and how stores operate.
By mid-March, lawmakers hadn’t filed any new legislation. Still, advocates and legislators kept talking about possible changes.
Tom Metzner, who started CT Towns Nixing The Nip, pushed for amendments and new bills. Rep. Mary Mushinsky suggested ideas to give towns more flexibility or expand redemption options.
Metzner tried to add an amendment to Senate Bill 299 to address bottle-redemption fraud and regulation. Opponents raised worries about losing local revenue and the possible hit to liquor sales.
Advocates, Industry, and the Road Ahead
The debate keeps circling back to environmental protections, public safety, and balancing local control with state policy. Environmental advocates say these bottles just add to preventable waste.
Some in the liquor industry warn against limiting nip sales, arguing it could hurt town budgets that now depend on this new revenue stream. The conversation’s far from settled, and it’s not clear yet how Connecticut will move forward.
Voices in the Debate
- Tom Metzner and his coalition are pushing for Nip bans.
- Rep. Mary Mushinsky is floating bills to tackle bans and redemption.
- Wine and Spirits Wholesalers of Connecticut and some liquor stores point to local control and revenue as key issues.
- Local officials from New Haven, Hartford, Stamford, Bridgeport, Waterbury, Norwalk, Danbury, and Greenwich are weighing their options.
Towns like Milford, Middletown, Meriden, Bristol, East Hartford, and West Haven are watching changes in nip-related revenue and litter patterns. Lawmakers keep circling the question: should they tighten restrictions or protect municipal revenue?
For residents and reporters from New London to Groton and everywhere in between, the Nip debate feels like a test of how much communities really value environmental responsibility compared to economic needs. Will the next legislative filings or town votes tip the balance?
Honestly, nobody knows for sure, but whatever happens next could change how these little bottles shape our neighborhoods, streets, and city budgets all across Connecticut.
Here is the source article for this story: CT’s ‘nips’ surcharge: What to know and why it faces opposition
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