The sale in Sullivan County of tobacco and related products
to individuals under 21 years of age should be prohibited in order
to:
A. Further the goals of New York State's tobacco use prevention
and control program, as identified in New York State Public Health
Law § 1399-ii;
B. Respond to the fact that tobacco is the leading cause of preventable
death and disease in New York State;
C. Respond to findings made by the Institute of Medicine, which prepared
a report at the request of the United States Food and Drug Administration
entitled "Public Health Implications of Raising the Minimum Age of
Legal Access to Tobacco Products," concluding and suggesting that:
(1) Adolescent brains are uniquely vulnerable to the effects of nicotine;
(2) A younger age of initiation is strongly associated with greater nicotine
dependence and is also associated with greater intensity and persistence
of smoking beyond adolescence and into adulthood;
(3) Almost one in five high school seniors is a current cigarette smoker;
(4) Underage users rely primarily on social sources, such as friends
and family, to acquire tobacco, and most of these sources are likely
to be between 18 and 20 years old;
(5) Raising the minimum legal age to 21 will mean that those who can
legally obtain tobacco are less likely to be in the same social networks
as high school students;
(6) Delaying initiation rates will likely decrease the prevalence of
tobacco users in the United States population; and
(7) Raising the minimum legal age will likely immediately improve the
health of adolescents and young adults by reducing the number of those
with adverse physiological effects;
D. Address the fact that, when adjusted for age, 24.5% of adults in
Sullivan County smoke, which contributes to Sullivan County having
the second worst ranking of overall health in the state;
E. Respond to findings that most of those addicted to tobacco start
using tobacco before 21 years of age;
F. Respond to the growing rates of electronic cigarette use among youth,
which exposes users to unhealthy levels of nicotine and other unknown
harmful chemicals;
G. Reduce the exposure of our youth to disease-causing toxins in secondhand
smoke and in chemicals emitted from electronic cigarettes, liquid
nicotine, shisha, herbal cigarettes, and other prohibited products
as defined herein;
H. Apply evidence-based strategies to address the public health issues
that result from tobacco use, including but not limited to cancer,
heart disease, and lung disease;
I. Prevent exposure of youth, who are particularly susceptible to addiction,
to the chemically addictive effects of tobacco and related products,
in an effort to improve public wellness and reduce health insurance
expenditures; and
J. Protect young Sullivan County residents from the unregulated and
unknown effects of electronic cigarettes, herbal cigarettes, and other
prohibited products.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
BIDIS
A product containing tobacco that is wrapped in temburni
leaf (diospyros melanoxylon) or tendra leaf (diospyros exculpra),
or any other product offered to consumers as "beedies" or "bidis."
ELECTRONIC CIGARETTES
An electronic device that, when activated, produces an aerosol
that may be inhaled. "Electronic cigarette" includes any component,
part, but not accessory, and any liquid or other substance to be aerosolized,
whether or not separately sold. "Electronic cigarette" does not include
drugs, devices, or combination products authorized for sale by the
state or United States Food and Drug Administration, as those terms
are defined in the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act.
PROHIBITED PRODUCTS
Tobacco products, electronic cigarettes, smoking paraphernalia
and any other products the sale of which is prohibited by New York
State Public Health Law Article 13-F, as may be amended from time
to time.
SCHOOL
Any structure and surrounding outdoor grounds contained within
a public or private preschool, nursery school, elementary or secondary
school legally defined property boundaries as registered in a county
clerk's office.
SMOKING PARAPHERNALIA
Shall include those terms defined in New York State Public
Health Law Article 13-F.
TOBACCO PRODUCTS
Any product made or derived from tobacco or which contains
nicotine marketed or sold for human consumption, whether consumption
occurs through inhalation or oral or dermal absorption. "Tobacco product"
does not include drugs, devices, or combination products authorized
for sale by the state or United States Food and Drug Administration,
as those terms are defined in the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic
Act. Examples of "tobacco products" include cigarettes, cigars, chewing
tobacco, powdered tobacco, shisha, bidis, gutka, nicotine water, herbal
cigarettes, electronic cigarettes, liquid nicotine, snuff, rolling
papers, and smoking paraphernalia.
Any person who violates any provision of this article shall
be subject to the imposition of a civil penalty by the enforcement
officer, a minimum of $300 but not to exceed $1,000 for a first violation,
and a minimum of $500, but not to exceed $1,500 for each subsequent
violation.
If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, or
part of this article or the application thereof to any person, individual,
corporation, firm, partnership, or business shall be adjudged by any
court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid or unconstitutional,
such order or judgment shall not affect, impair, or invalidate the
remainder thereof but shall be confined in its operation to the clause,
sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section, or part of this article,
or in its specific application.
The article shall be null and void on the day that statewide
or federal legislation goes into effect incorporating either the same
or substantially similar provisions as contained in this article,
or in the event that a pertinent state or federal agency promulgates
regulations that preempt the provisions of this article.