UPDATE: After I filed my latest Beer Town column (below), news came that the Sandy Springs city council had unanimously voted for a new city ordinance to allow growler sales at brewpubs.

"Amazing what can happen minus corruption and bureaucracy," was the immediate reaction to the vote from Kevin McNerney, the brewmaster at Five Seasons Brewing Co. at the Prado in Sandy Springs.

Once the mayor adds his signature to the ordinance, which is expected as early as today, the brewpub will fill and sell its first growler, McNerney said.

On March 11, 2016, Moon River Brewing Co. in Savannah became the first brewpub in the state of Georgia to fill and sell a beer growler. On March 22, Five Seasons North in Alpharetta became the second to sell its beer to go. And on March 25, Hop Alley in Alpharetta became the third.

If you live in almost any other state, those dates might not seem like historical facts worth noting. But for many years now, I've called Georgia a growler Bizarro World , where, as in DC Comics, everything wrong is right.

In fact, looking at a column I wrote back in 2013, I explained why I wasn't a fan of the proliferation of growler shops and stations in the state . I'd always thought of growlers as something you grab as a sample or souvenir while you're visiting a brewery or brewpub somewhere.

In other words, most of the time, in most places, growler sales have been connected to local businesses that brew beer. Last year, the Georgia Legislature finally seemed to come around to that point of view, passing a bill that finally allowed production breweries to sell growlers.

Oddly, though, after the law went into effect, it was essentially quashed by some new Department of Revenue regulations . And the Legislature saw fit to leave brewpubs out of the law altogether, banishing the most logical business to sell beer to go to the most bizarre corner of growler Bizarro World.

Then, in March, something remarkable happened. A few beer-loving lawyers and brewpub owners started taking a closer look at Georgia law. Suddenly, like Dorothy clicking her heels in Oz, it seemed that brewpubs always had the power to sell growlers. They just had to discover it for themselves — and get a little help from local governments.

What will happen next is anybody’s guess, given the legislative and regulatory attitudes toward small breweries in Georgia.

But with any luck, it looks like we’ve turned a corner, and in addition to Savannah and Alpharetta, cities like Atlanta and Decatur may soon vote to allow brewpubs to sell growlers. Maybe more important, Georgia Department of Revenue Commissioner Lynne Riley has weighed in and said that leaving it up to municipalities is just fine with her.

Asked about my growler Bizarro World theory, John Pinkerton, the former head of the Georgia Craft Brewers Guild and the owner/brewer of Moon River, said he was optimistic about the future but remains unsatisfied with the current state of Georgia's brewery laws.

“The Bizarro World thing still remains,” Pinkerton said. “But from where I’m standing, right now, I’m just trying to be gracious and get busy selling some growlers. And I do want show my appreciation for the cooperation of commissioner Riley. She called me personally on March 11 and let me know it would be OK. And then we had a great big toast with our Swamp Fox IPA.”

Dave Larkworthy, the chef and co-owner of Five Seasons North, had a similar reaction when his brewpub got its license and poured its first growler in Alpharetta.

“The City Council approved it 7-0, there was no opposition, there were no lobbyists,” Larkworthy said. “It was amazing how well the whole process worked. I went and picked up the license the next afternoon, and that night we started pouring growlers.

“In fact, I took home a growler of our Dark Star stout and drank it with my wife. I’ve had many great beers from Five Seasons over many, many years, but it was one of the tastiest ever. I was drinking my beer in the comfort of my house and it was amazing.”

MORE:

Three under-the-radar Atlanta brewpubs

Spring beer releases from Georgia breweries

25 of Georgia’s best beers