HELENA, Mont. (May 3, 2021) – On Friday night, Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte signed a “food freedom” bill into law that legalizes the unregulated sale of home-produced foods from producers to informed end consumers, including raw milk and raw milk products. The enactment of this bill takes an important step toward rejecting a federal prohibition scheme in practice and effect and will undermine FDA control over food production.
Sen. Greg Hertz (R-Polson) introduced Senate Bill 199 (SB199) on Feb. 8. Titled
The Montana Local Food Choice Act, the new law prohibits a state or local government agency from requiring licensure, permitting, certification, packaging, labeling, or inspection that pertains to the preparation, serving, use, consumption, delivery, or storage of homemade food or homemade food products.
Country crooner Maren Morris and R&B belter Tinashe were among the five headliners performing at SHEIN Together Fest, which livestreamed Sunday at 2pm PST via the SHEIN app.
The 31-year-old Grammy winner dressed her post-baby body in a crochet halter, black pencil skirt, and white gladiator heels from the fast fashion e-commerce platform founded in 2008. I feel like I probably wear more high-waisted stuff now, but I definitely also - after my son, Maren admitted to People last Friday. #SHEINpartners : Country crooner Maren Morris (L) and R&B belter Tinashe (R) were among the five headliners performing at SHEIN Together Fest, which livestreamed Sunday at 2pm PST via the SHEIN app
Joseph Woodrow Hatchett poses with family members in 1975. Credit: Mark Foley via State Library and Archives of Florida
My all-time favorite judge has died. He was only 88 years old. I had hoped he would live forever.
Judge Joseph Woodrow Hatchett, a Clearwater native, was our first Black Supreme Court Justice, appointed to the court in 1975 by then Gov. Reubin Askew. He died Friday.
He was a soft spoken, low key sort of man who graduated from Florida A & M, one of our best known historically Black universities, and went on to get his law degree from Howard University.
He was one of several prominent lawyers who fought for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund in the 1960s and served as an assistant United States attorney for the Middle District of Florida for several years.