11.10.17 – What we’re reading and watching this morning

(Illinois)

Elk Grove Village – Ordinance No. 3527, An ordinance amending section 3-6B-1 and Section 3-6B-4 of the village code by amending …

“WHEREAS, the Mayor and Village Board has determined that it will serve and advance the public’s health, safety and welfare and be in the best interest of the Village and its residents, to amend the Village Code of Elk Grove Village to increase the minimum age for the purchase and sale of tobacco products and electronic smoking devices to twenty-one (21) years of age.”

(Maryland)

Loyola University, The Greyhound, Jack Ebmeier – SMOKE-FREE CAMPUS INITIATIVE MISUNDERSTANDS PROBLEM

“First, it is important to draw a distinction between a “smoke-free campus” movement and a “smoke-free student body” movement. While the former would constitute a blanket ban of tobacco and nicotine products on campus, the latter would be a concentrated effort to help the student body wean off the addictive substance. While this seems like a meaningless distinction, it creates two vastly different futures for the Loyola community.”

(Massachusetts)

Middleboro, MA – The Enterprise, Eileen Reece – Middleboro board keeps tobacco-buying age at 18

“‘I am opposed to changing the age to make it up to 21. If the state thinks it’s a good idea, let the state issue the mandate. Cause I don’t believe I should create business for my surrounding towns by taking it away from my own town,’ said Selectmen Vice-Chairman Stephen McKinnon on Oct. 30.”

(Michigan)

Bridgemi.com, Michelle Minton – When Lansing writes laws based on emotion, rather than facts

“Laws that banned e-cigarette sales to minors, for example, seemed only to push teens into smoking traditional cigarettes at higher rates. Taxes on soda, meant to reduce the consumption of sugary beverages, only caused people to drink more beer. And keg registration laws only prompted underage drinkers to buy different forms of alcohol.”

(Oregon)

KTVZ.com news sources – Crook County tobacco sales ordinance takes effect on ‘Smokeout’ Day

“…November 16 also marks the day that Crook County Ordinance #300 goes into effect.  This ordinance requires all Crook County retailers who sell tobacco products, including e-cigarettes, to post Oregon Tobacco Quitline contact information at the point of sale.”

(USA)

The Washington Times, Laura Kelly – E-Cigarette users save more money than smokers, poll shows

“Users who switched to e-cigarettes reported saving an average of $1,416.60, according to the online poll conducted by LendEDU, an online marketplace that helps students refinance their loans.”

(Canada)

National Post – Big Tobacco urges Canada to ensure legal nicotine competitive with black market

“Imperial isn’t lobbying for lower taxes for traditional cigarettes but is against future increases as well as the federal government’s plan to require plain and standardized packaging…”

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: Alex Clark

Posted in All posts, e cigarettes, great american smokeout, News, Smokeless Tobacco, Tobacco 21, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on 11.10.17 – What we’re reading and watching this morning

IL – Elk Grove Village – Stop Tobacco 21!

The Elk Grove Village Board of Trustees will be considering an ordinance (Ordinance No. 3527) that would raise the age to purchase, possess, and sell all tobacco and vapor products from 18 to 21-years-old.

The public will have an opportunity to comment during a Committee of the Whole meeting on

Tuesday, November 14, 2017

4:00 PM

901 Wellington Avenue, Room E

Elk Grove Village, IL 60007

Please make plans to attend this hearing. Even if you do not plan to speak, your presence is important as it demonstrates the large numbers of people affected by this issue.

In advance of the hearing, take a moment to send a message to the village board urging them to reject this harmful ordinance.

You can also send your comments via regular mail to:

  • Elk Grove Village Board of Trustees
  • 901 Wellington Ave., Elk Grove Village, IL 60007

Or call:

  • 847-439-4010

___________________________________

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: Alex Clark

Posted in All posts, Call to Action, Calls To Action, CTA, e cigarettes, Elk Grove Village, IL-CTA-current, Illinois, Local Alert, News, Smokeless Tobacco, Tobacco 21, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on IL – Elk Grove Village – Stop Tobacco 21!

11.09.17 – What we’re reading and watching this morning

(Minnesota)

Mankato/N.Mankato – Mankato-N. Kato resolve to decide tobacco issue after Jan. 1

Mankato Free Press, Mark Fischenich

A divided Mankato-North Mankato Intergovernmental Committee couldn’t agree on a recommendation on the Tobacco 21 initiative Wednesday night.”

Robbinsdale, MN – City Council Meeting 11.07.17

Section 9, Old Business, Item A: First Reading: Amendment to Robbinsdale’s Tobacco License Regulations (click on the item under the video)

(Rhode Island)

Middletown, RI – New tobacco rules coming under scrutiny

The Newport Daily News, Matt Sheley

“Late last month, a complaint in Newport Superior Court from two local convenience stores said the town overreached by passing rules banning the sale of flavored tobacco and the aggressive marketing of those products and also didn’t properly advertise the changes before they were approved.”

(Wisconsin)

Juneau County, WI – Addiction expert warns about smoking at Mauston presentation

Juneau County Star-Times, Jake Ekdahl

“Macmaster emphasized that tobacco addiction should be approached and treated like other harmful substance addictions, such as alcohol or drugs.”

(Research)

Aldehyde levels in e-cigarette aerosol: Findings from a replication study and from use of a new-generation device

Science Direct, Konstantinos E. Farsalinos, Kurt A. Kistler, Alexander Pennington, Alketa Spyrou, Dimitris Kouretas, Gene Gillman

“A recent study identified high aldehyde emissions from e-cigarettes (ECs), that when converted to reasonable daily human EC liquid consumption, 5 g/day, gave formaldehyde exposure equivalent to 604–3257 tobacco cigarettes. We replicated this study and also tested a new-generation atomizer under verified realistic (no dry puff) conditions.”

Smokers Turn to e-Cigarettes in Attempt to Quit

Medscape, Maureen Salamon

“In the Tennessee-based study, current cigarette smokers were seven times more likely than nonsmokers to be e-cigarette users. Additionally, tobacco smokers who also smoked e-cigarettes were at least 3.5 times more likely than non-e-cigarette users to have quit smoking for a day or longer during the past 12 months for the sake of quitting.”

(Watch)

https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: Alex Clark

Posted in All posts, e cigarettes, Minnesota, News, Rhode Island, Smokeless Tobacco, Tennessee, Vaping, Vaping News, Wisconsin | Comments Off on 11.09.17 – What we’re reading and watching this morning

Alexandria, MN – Take action to stop a vaping ban!

An ordinance that would ban vaping in the same places where smoking is prohibited is being considered by Alexandria’s city council. The city council will hold a public hearing and possibly take action on this ordinance on

Monday, October 23, 2017

7:00 PM

704 Broadway – Council Chambers

Alexandria, MN 56308

Please make plans to attend this hearing. Even if you do not plan to speak, your presence is important as it demonstrates the large numbers of people who are affected by this issue.

In advance of the hearing, please take a moment to contact city council members and urge them to oppose this regulation.

Health organizations in the UK have demonstrated bold leadership by recommending that governments NOT enact sweeping bans on where vapor products can be used. Instead, given the low risk these products pose to users and practically no risk to bystanders, private businesses should be in control of setting their own vaping policies.

(Letter to Alexandria tobacco retailers)

(Link to proposed ordinance)

(Link to October 23rd agenda)


Not a resident of Alexandria? Text CASAA MINN to 52886 to see Minnesota alerts in your area. Be sure to sign up to monitor activities in your town through the “Adopt a City/County” form here.

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: Alex Clark

Posted in Active, Alexandria, All posts, Calls To Action, CTA, e cigarettes, Indoor Vaping Ban, Local Alert, Minnesota, MN-CTA-current, News, Smokeless Tobacco, vape ban, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on Alexandria, MN – Take action to stop a vaping ban!

Lindenhurst, NY – Local Alert – Take action to stop a vape shop ban!

The Lindenhurst Village Board is considering a zoning ordinance that would ban vapor shops and hookah lounges. A public hearing will be held on

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

2:30 PM

Village Hall

430 S. Wellwood Ave.

Lindenhurst NY 11757

Please make plans to attend this hearing. Even if you do not plan to speak, your presence is important as it demonstrates the large numbers of people affected by this issue.

In advance of the hearing, please take a moment to send a message to Village Board members urging them to reject this proposal.

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: Alex Clark

Posted in All posts, Call to Action, CTA, e cigarettes, Lindenhurst, Local Alert, New York, News, NY-CTA-current, Smokeless Tobacco, Vape Shop Ban, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on Lindenhurst, NY – Local Alert – Take action to stop a vape shop ban!

CASAA Submits Comment in Support of MRTP Application for IQOS

On September 14th, CASAA submitted a comment in support of PMI’s Modified Risk Tobacco Product (MRTP) application for their “heat not burn” product, IQOS.

“…there is no doubt that this technology will benefit the health of the population as a whole. IQOS clearly appeals to a significant segment of the smoking population, as illustrated by the fact that more than 3 million smokers worldwide thus far have switched to IQOS.”

The docket for this application will be open for comments from the public until December 12, 2017.

CASAA’s full comment is available here.

If approved, PMI would be allowed to market their IQOS products with the following, truthful claims:

  • IQOS system heats tobacco but does not burn it.
  • This significantly reduces the production of harmful and potentially harmful chemicals.
  • Scientific studies have shown that switching completely from cigarettes to the IQOS system can reduce the risks of tobacco-related diseases.
  • Switching completely to IQOS presents less risk of harm than continuing to smoke cigarettes.
  • Switching completely from cigarettes to the IQOS system significantly reduces your body’s exposure to harmful and potentially harmful chemicals.

Since being granted regulatory authority over tobacco products in 2009, the FDA has not approved a single MRTP application. In 2014, snus maker Swedish Match submitted a lengthy MRTP application asking to remove specific warning statements from ten of its snus products. In 2016, FDA responded by deferring its decision and is reportedly working with Swedish Match on a path forward. You can read CASAA’s comment here and our review of FDA’s decision here.

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: Alex Clark

Posted in All posts, e cigarettes, iqos, modified risk, MRTP, News, PMI, Smokeless Tobacco, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on CASAA Submits Comment in Support of MRTP Application for IQOS

Starkville, MS – Stop an Indoor Vaping Ban! (Update)

(Update – 09.20.17)

Last night, a small handful of advocates and business owners were able to mobilize on short notice and speak in opposition to Starkville’s proposed ordinance to treat vaping like smoking. The debate among city aldermen focused on which version of the ordinance they should move forward with–one criminalizes possession for <21, and the other does not.

No decision was made and a second hearing is expected in October.

We will update this post as information becomes available. In the meantime, THANK YOU to everyone who responded to this alert and a special THANK YOU to those who were able to attend the meeting.

(Original Post – 09.19.17)

The Starkville City council will have the first public hearing for an amendment that would add vaping to the city’s indoor smoking ban tonight

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2017

5:30 P.M.

COURTROOM

CITY HALL 110 WEST MAIN STREET

The proposed ordinance is item “C” under the public hearing section of the agenda.

Please make plans to attend this hearing and make your voices heard.

You can refer to our suggested talking points on this issue to help craft your comment (see below or click here)

Even if you do not plan to speak, your presence is important as it demonstrates the numbers of people who are affected by this issue. Please be polite but passionate about your comment and respect the decorum of the hearing room.

Contact information for City Aldermen

Staff
Name Title Email Phone
Carver, Ben Alderman, Ward 1 [email protected] (662) 769-0792
Sistrunk, Sandra C. Alderman, Ward 2 [email protected] 662-418-4574
Little, David Alderman, Ward 3 [email protected] 662 418-9918
Walker, Jason Alderman, Ward 4 [email protected] 662 617-0130
Miller, Patrick Alderman, Ward 5 [email protected] (662) 418-8978
Perkins, Roy A’. Vice-Mayor; Alderman, Ward 6 [email protected] (662) 324-7300
Vaughn, Sr., Henry N. Alderman, Ward 7 [email protected] 662-769-5049; 662-323-2400

Comma delimited email list:

[email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]

(Did you find this post helpful? Help us continue working to keep vaping accessible to the people who need it the most! Please donate to CASAA!)

____________________________________________

Suggested Talking Points – Place Ban

  • (Please choose a few of the points below — topics you are most comfortable discussing.)
  1. You are a resident and you oppose banning e-cigarette use where smoking is prohibited. (If you are responding to a Call to Action or Local Alert for a city or state in which you are not a resident, please mention any connection you have to the area, for example, you travel there on vacation or have friends/family in the area.)
  1. Other governments are taking exactly the opposite approach; Public Health England (the government public health agency) and The Royal College of Physicians (a 500 year old association of 32,000 medical professionals in the UK) recently explicitly endorsed a policy of encouraging smokers to switch to e-cigarettes and vapor products (https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/e-cigarettes-an-evidence-update) (https://www.rcplondon.ac.uk/projects/outputs/nicotine-without-smoke-tobacco-harm-reduction-0).
  1. Tell your story on how switching to an e-cigarette has changed your life. (Avoid using slang terms such as “juice.”)
  1. Clarify that:
    1. Smoking bans are ostensibly enacted to protect the public from the harm of secondhand smoke, but e-cigarettes have not been found to pose a risk to bystanders. In fact, all evidence to date shows that the low health risks associated with e-cigarettes are comparable to other smokeless nicotine products.
    2. The low risks of e-cigarettes is supported by research done by Dr. Siegel of Boston University, Dr. Eissenberg of Virginia Commonwealth, Dr Maciej L Goniewicz of the Roswell Park Cancer Institute, Dr. Laugesen of Health New Zealand, Dr. Igor Burstyn of Drexel University, and by the fact that the FDA testing, in spite of its press statement, failed to find harmful levels of carcinogens or toxic levels of any chemical in the vapor.
    3. A comprehensive review conducted by Dr. Igor Burstyn of Drexel University School of Public Health based on over 9,000 observations of e-cigarette liquid and vapor found “no apparent concern” for bystanders exposed to e-cigarette vapor, even under “worst case” assumptions about exposure.
    4. Electronic cigarette use is easy to distinguish from actual smoking. Although some e-cigarettes resemble real cigarettes, many do not. It is easy to tell when someone lights a cigarette from the smell of smoke. E-cigarette vapor is often practically odorless, and generally any detectable odor is not unpleasant and smells nothing like smoke. Additionally, e-cigarette users can decide whether to release any vapor (“discreet vaping”).  With so little evidence of use, enforcing use bans on electronic cigarettes would be nearly impossible.
    5. The ability to use electronic cigarettes in public spaces will actually improve public health by inspiring other smokers to switch and reduce their health risks by an estimated 99%.
    6. Losing the ability to test e-liquids before purchasing will have a significant and negative impact on your ability to purchase/sell e-liquids.
    7. Many smokers first try e-cigarettes because they can use them where they cannot smoke, however, they often become “accidental quitters.” This is a documented phenomenon unique to e-cigarettes. It may take a few months or only a few days, but they inevitably stop smoking conventional cigarettes. This is why including e-cigarettes in smoking bans could have serious unintended consequences!
    8. By making e-cigarette users go outdoors, the City will also be sending a strong message to traditional smokers that e-cigarettes are no safer than smoking. This will actually maintain the number of smokers, rather than help reduce smoking. This is a far more realistic risk to public health than any unfounded concerns about possible youth or non-smoker use uptake. In fact, the most recent report by the CDC showed that the dramatic increase in e-cigarette use over that past 3 years has not led to an increase in youth smoking. Youth smoking of traditional cigarettes continues to decline to record low levels.
    9. The children of smoking parents are far more likely to become smokers than the children of non-smoking parents who see smoking behaviors in public. The children of smoking parents who quit aren’t any more likely to smoke than those of non-smoking parents. Prohibiting vapor products in public does little to protect the children of non-smoking parents from becoming smokers, but significantly increases the likelihood that many smoking parents won’t switch to e-cigarettes. This only serves to keep the highest-risk children at risk.
    10. E-cigarette use does not promote the smoking of traditional cigarettes, nor does it threaten the gains of tobacco control over the past few decades. In fact, by normalizing e-cigarette use over traditional smoking, the efforts of tobacco control are being supported. If anything, e-cigarette use denormalizes conventional smoking by setting the example of smokers choosing a far less harmful alternative to traditional smoking. The CDC surveys clearly show that there has been no “gateway effect” causing non-smokers to start smoking. As e-cigarettes have become more popular, all available evidence is showing that more and more smokers are quitting traditional cigarettes, including youth smokers.
    11. Important Note: A typical and frequent lawmaker response to e-cigarette users who object to public use bans is “We aren’t banning all use or sales, just use where smoking is also prohibited.” Don’t give them the opportunity to counter you in that way! Make it very clear that you understand that this is not a ban of e-cigarette sales or a ban of e-cigarette use where smoking is allowed. But, what IS being proposed is still a step backward in public health, not a step forward.

5) Direct them to the CASAA.org website, as well as the CASAA Research Library, for more information.

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: Alex Clark

Posted in Active, All posts, Call to Action, Calls To Action, e cigarettes, indoor use ban, Indoor Vaping Ban, Local Alert, Mississippi, MS-CTA-current, News, Smokeless Tobacco, Starkville, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on Starkville, MS – Stop an Indoor Vaping Ban! (Update)

CT – Take action to stop and outrageous tax on vaping!

On September 8, 2017, Governor Dannel Malloy delivered a compromise budget to the Connecticut legislature that contains an outrageous 75% wholesale tax on vapor products and a $2.00/oz hike in the tax on smokeless tobacco (bringing the total tax to $3.00/oz).

Complicating matters is the fact that Connecticut has been without a budget for more than two months. This is contributing to an urgency to pass this budget this week.

Please take action now and send a message to Governor Malloy and key lawmakers in the Connecticut legislature urging them to remove this tax proposal from the 2018-2019 budget.

Remember to make a call today too. The important numbers and talking points for you to use on your call are listed below.

Governor
Dannel Malloy 1.860.566.4840
Joint Committee on Appropriations
Paul M. Formica (R-S20) Co-Chair 1.800.842.1421
Catherine A. Osten (D-S19) Co-Chair 1.860.240.0579
Toni E. Walker (D-H093) Co-Chair 1.860.240.8585
Melissa H. Ziobron (R-H034) Ranking Member 1.860.240.8700

When you call, your message is simple:

  • State that you are opposed to enacting a 75% wholesale tax on vapor products.
  • “Please do not raise taxes on low-risk, smoke-free tobacco and nicotine products.”
  • Share your story about how vaping or switching to a low-risk tobacco product has helped you.

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: Alex Clark

Posted in All posts, e cigarettes, News, Smokeless Tobacco, Vaping, Vaping News | Comments Off on CT – Take action to stop and outrageous tax on vaping!

More Evidence Suggests E-Cigarettes Help Some Smokers Quit

By Tara Haelle 

Forbes.com

Since the arrival of e-cigarettes, debates have raged in public health and research circles about their value and risks. Can they actually help people stop smoking for good? How much harm can they cause? How does that harm compare to the harm from smoking tobacco cigarettes? Do e-cigarettes increase the risk that kids will start smoking? A cherry-picker could find studies to support any position on any of these questions, but it takes time for enough researchers to conduct enough high-quality studies that a consensus can emerge. On the first question — can e-cigarettes help some people quit smoking — that consensus is increasingly pointing to “Yes.”

But — as with so much in health and behavior research — it depends. A new studywhose methods are more granular than in past studies has started to tease out what makes the difference and who is most likely to benefit. The basic finding: the more days you use e-cigarettes, the more likely you are to successfully quit.

“Results revealed that greater frequency of e-cigarette use beyond ever use [using one at least once] and especially with 20 or more days of use in the past month was strongly associated with both having made a quit attempt and a greater likelihood of three months or more of cigarette smoking cessation,” wrote David T. Levy, PhD, and his colleagues at the Georgetown University Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center. “The consistency of positive associations with quit attempts or cessation success suggests that more frequent e-cigarette use may be effective as a smoking cessation aid.”

These results supported the findings of another recent study in BMJ that assessed e-cigarette and tobacco smoking rates across the US population over five years.

The research, funded by the National Institute of Drug Abuse and the National Cancer Institute (no industry!), was published today in the journal Nicotine & Tobacco Research. By no means will this study put to rest the debate between those who say e-cigarettes can’t be a cessation tool and those who say it can (including thousands of people on Twitter who will tell you in a heartbeat, multiple times, that it helped them). But one of its most important contributions is providing a template for how to study this question in a more detailed way than past observational studies.

 “An important part of our study was to distinguish the effect of e-cigarette use on quit attempts and quit success by separating considering the smokers who might attempt to quit and those that have actually made a quit attempt,” the authors wrote.

The researchers used the same data source as the BMJ study and even past studies finding less evidence for e-cigarettes as smoking cessation tools, the Tobacco Use Supplement survey used in the annual Current Population Survey conducted by the Census Bureau. This survey asks detailed questions about smokers’ habits, quit attempts and quit success.

The data for this study came from the 2014-2015 survey and included 23,633 smokers, just under half of whom (10,973) had attempted at least once to quit smoking. Most of those who tried to quit didn’t succeed, a total of 8,419 people. But 1,596 people had remained successful for at least 3 to 12 months, 623 of them had quit one to three months before the survey, and 335 had just quit within the past month. By analyzing survey responses in these individual groups about who had used e-cigarettes and how often, the researchers were able to analyze the link between e-cigarettes and quitting more closely.

They found that smokers who used an e-cigarette only once or a few times were less likely to successfully quit, a possible reason for some past studies’ findings that e-cigarettes didn’t help if those studies lumped together people who had ever tried an e-cigarette and those who used them more frequently. But for those who used e-cigarettes more often, especially the longer they used them, the success rate went up. Each additional day of e-cigarette used increased the odds of successfully quitting by about 5%, the researchers found. Using e-cigarettes for at least five days in a month increased the odds of quitting by 59%, and using them at least 20 days more than doubled the odds.

These calculations also took into account other factors that could have influenced people’s success rates, including the average price of cigarettes in their state, laws in their state related to smoking, use of smokeless tobacco, how often they smoked, gender, age (broken down into very small groups), race/ethnicity, income, educational level, marital status, employment status and living in a rural or urban area. The others suggested that a study in 2010 using the same data source might have found e-cigarettes less helpful at helping people quit because e-cigarettes were not as sophisticated as they are today, especially in delivering bigger doses of nicotine.

As with any research question, it will require many more studies to parse out who e-cigarettes can help quit smoking and the best way to use them, and too little information exists about long-term potential for harm from e-cigarettes. But all the evidence to date suggests that e-cigarettes are not nearly as harmful and life-threatening as tobacco use, so e-cigarettes appear to be a viable quitting option, the researchers note, for those who don’t succeed with other methods.

Posted in All posts, e cigarettes, e-cigarette, News, nicotine, Smoking/nicotine addiction, Uncategorized, Vaping, Vaping News | Tagged , | Comments Off on More Evidence Suggests E-Cigarettes Help Some Smokers Quit

NYC’s Anti-tobacco and -vaping package passed – Update and Digest

Update – 08.11.17

On Wednesday, August 9th, The New York City Council voted to pass a package of anti-tobacco and anti-vaping ordinances. Please see the table below for a digest of each law that was passed and their effective dates.

Bill Number Description Effective Date
Int. No 0484-A – Prohibits smoking and vaping in the common areas of ALL multiple dwellings. Existing law limits this prohibition to buildings containing more than ten dwelling units. 180 days

after becoming law

Int. No 1131-B – Prohibits the sale of Tobacco and Vapor products in pharmacies.

– §3. (Effective following enactment) No pharmacies can apply for a new dealer’s license. Renewals will only be valid until Dec. 31, 2018.

Jan-01-2019
Int. No 1471-A – Increases biennial retail cigarette dealer license fee from $110 to $200. See effective dates for

Int. No 1547-A

Int. No 1532-A – (Effective 360 days after becoming law) Requires anyone selling electronic cigarettes to have an electronic cigarette retail dealer license for EACH place of business where e-cigarettes are sold.

– Prohibits pharmacies from obtaining an electronic cigarette retail dealer license.

– Establishes a 90 period that begins when the law is enacted in which existing vapor retailers are able to apply for a new license. After this 90 period, no new licenses will be issued.

– (Effective Immediately) The commissioner of consumer affairs must publicize the 90 application period to maximize awareness.

– Establishes biennial licensing fee of $200

– Establishes a community district electronic cigarette retail dealer cap. This cap will be set at HALF the number of licenses issued during the 120 period following the expiration of the 90 application period.

– Electronic retail dealer licenses are allowed to be sold but are only valid for the property that was originally licensed. Effectively, these licenses are non-transferrable.

– Establishes financial penalties for violations (Effective date: See Int. No 1544-B)

– Establishes penalties for violation and grounds for revoking licenses.

150 days

after becoming law

(see exceptions in description)

Int. No 1544-B – §3 Establishes price floors and taxes for other tobacco products (OTP). This includes a price floor for low-risk products like American moist snuff and Swedish snus which is set at $8.00. (please see the table on page 6 of the bill for more details)

– Expands the existing cigarette licenses to include OTP henceforth referred to as “tobacco dealer license.”

– Raises the price floor for cigarettes from $10.50 to $13.00.

– §17 Establishes minimum package sizes for cigarettes and OTP.

– §18 Prohibits delivery of cigarettes, OTP, and e-cigarettes by foot, bicycle, or any motor vehicle outside of a retail dealer’s place of business.

The first day of the calendar month next following the 270th day after it becomes law, provided that subdivision b of §17-704.1 of the administrative code of the city of New York, as added by §18 of this local law, takes effect 150 days after it becomes law.
Int. No 1547-A – §10, subdivision e directs the commissioner of finance to establish a community district retail dealer cap for each community district in the city. This cap will be set at HALF the total number of licenses issued excluding retail dealer licenses issued to pharmacies. 180 days

after becoming law

Int. No 1585-A – Requires owners of co-ops and condominiums to adopt and disclose smoking policies. 365 days

after becoming law

Related:

This article was originally published at CASAA
Author: Alex Clark

Posted in e cigarettes, Licensing, New York, New York City, News, NYC, Price Floor, Smokeless Tobacco, snus, tax, tobacco tax, Vaping | Comments Off on NYC’s Anti-tobacco and -vaping package passed – Update and Digest