New Hampshire 2025 Regular Session

New Hampshire House Bill HB307

Introduced
1/8/25  
Refer
1/8/25  
Report Pass
3/7/25  
Engrossed
3/24/25  
Refer
3/24/25  
Report Pass
4/9/25  
Enrolled
5/13/25  
Chaptered
5/30/25  

Caption

Relative to the food production area for homestead food.

Impact

The enactment of HB 307 will likely enhance the ability of residents to engage in food production and sales from their homes, which can stimulate local economies and provide fresh food options directly to consumers. It mandates clear labeling on all food products, which includes the producer's information, ingredients, and allergy warnings, thereby promoting transparency and informed consumer choices. This clarity in labeling is especially important for safeguarding public health and could lead to an increase in consumer trust in locally produced foods.

Summary

House Bill 307 is focused on establishing regulations pertaining to homestead food operations in New Hampshire. The bill defines a 'homestead food operation' as a person producing homestead food products in their primary residence's kitchen or specified food production area. The criteria for these areas include essential facilities and cleanliness standards like handwashing stations, pet exclusion zones, and food storage conditions, aiming to ensure food safety for consumers. By allowing food production in designated areas, the bill encourages local food entrepreneurship while setting forth essential guidelines to maintain health standards.

Contention

Despite its intent to support local food systems and production, HB 307 may face criticisms regarding potential regulatory burden on small producers who must ensure compliance with stringent labeling and sanitation standards. Critics may argue that such regulations could stifle the very entrepreneurship the bill aims to promote, leading to concerns over what constitutes 'potentially hazardous food' and whether the guidelines sufficiently allow flexibility for small-scale operations. Discussions surrounding the bill may reveal differing perspectives on the balance between regulation and the support of local food entrepreneurs.

Companion Bills

No companion bills found.

Previously Filed As

NH HB1685

Redefining "homestead foods" as "artisan foods," creating an artisan food operations exemption, establishing artisan food products sales venues, and allowing the production and sale of artisan food products requiring refrigeration.

NH HB1565

Relative to the definition of potentially hazardous food.

NH HB119

Relative to homestead food operation licensure and making provisions for the sale of meat from uninspected bison, elk, or red deer.

NH HB122

Relative to microenterprise home kitchen operations.

NH HB122

Relative to microenterprise home kitchen operations.

NH HB242

Relative to banning PFAS in food packaging.

NH HB242

Relative to banning PFAS in food packaging.

NH HB280

Relative to the sale of freeze-dried food.

NH HB1207

Relative to single-use disposable plastic foodware accessories.

NH HB1346

Relative to food service at a bed and breakfast.

Similar Bills

NJ S1309

Requires direct payment of homestead credit to claimant following sale of qualifying homestead and upon claimant request.

NJ S2037

Requires direct payment of homestead credit to claimant following sale of qualifying homestead and upon claimant request.

CA AB1885

Debtor exemptions: homestead exemption.

NJ A5089

Prohibits homestead property tax rebates and credits and ANCHOR property tax benefits from being paid to property owners who move out of State.

FL H1105

Rescinding a Homestead Exemption Application

NJ A254

Permits eligible claimant who is proportionate owner paying entire property tax bill to collect entire homestead property tax reimbursement amount.

NJ A975

Permits eligible claimant who is proportionate owner paying entire property tax bill to collect entire homestead property tax reimbursement amount.

CA SB832

Debtor exemptions: homestead exemption.