New Jersey State Council Approves Three Anti-Tobacco Bills

Regulations by 2FIRSTS.ai
May.20.2024
New Jersey State Council Approves Three Anti-Tobacco Bills
Three bills targeting tobacco and e-cigarette products were approved by the Morris County Council Health Committee.

According to Parsippany Focus on May 19th, the Health Committee of the Morris County Council in New Jersey has approved three bills aimed at combating the increasing proliferation of tobacco and e-cigarette products. The proposed legislation includes increasing penalties for selling e-cigarettes, mandatory inspections for retailers, and developing guidelines for schools on educating the public about the dangers of tobacco and e-cigarettes.

 

In this, New Jersey Representatives Herb Conaway, Michael Venezia, and Tennille McCoy introduced Bill A3992 to propose increasing penalties for the sale of tobacco and e-cigarette products. William Spearman and others introduced Bill A2388 advocating for higher inspection frequency for retailers. Additionally, Shanique Speight, Verlina Reynolds Jackson, and others introduced Bill A2029 directing the New Jersey Department of Education (NJDOE) and Department of Health (NJDOH) to develop guidelines for student e-cigarette awareness activities in school districts and higher education institutions.

 

Bill A3992 will expand the definition of "tobacco products" to include any product containing tobacco or nicotine and its related accessories. This includes vapor products, snuff, water pipe tobacco, filters, rolling papers, and similar items. The bill will also increase penalties for retailers selling tobacco products to individuals under 21 years of age - with a maximum penalty of $750 for a first offense, $1,500 for a second offense, and $3,000 for subsequent offenses.

 

Bill A2388 will allow county or city law enforcement agencies, under the guidance of the Minister of Justice, to conduct at least two annual inspections of retailers, serve and enforce violation subpoenas, and confiscate any e-cigarette products found to be in violation. Non-compliant retailers will be subject to follow-up inspections three months later.

 

A2029 will guide the NJDOE and NJDOH in developing campus anti-e-cigarette activity guidelines to assist schools, colleges, and universities in communicating the risks of e-cigarettes to students. It will provide decision-making tools and marketing materials tailored to specific age groups, including information on the effects of e-cigarettes on physical and mental health, pregnancy, the workplace, and exposure to young children.

 

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