Whereas there exists conclusive evidence that tobacco smoking
causes cancer, respiratory and cardiac diseases, negative birth outcomes,
irritations to the eyes, nose and throat;
Whereas among the 15.7% of students nationwide who currently
smoke cigarettes and were less than 18 years old, 14.1% usually obtained
them by buying them in a store (i.e., convenience store, supermarket,
or discount store) or gas station;
Whereas nationally in 2009, 72% of high school smokers and 66%
of middle school smokers were not asked to show proof of age when
purchasing cigarettes;
Whereas the United States Department of Health and Human Services
has concluded that nicotine is as addictive as cocaine or heroin and the Surgeon General found that nicotine exposure during
adolescence, a critical window for brain development, may have lasting
adverse consequences for brain development;
Whereas despite state laws prohibiting the sale of tobacco products
to minors, access by minors to tobacco products is a major public
health problem;
Whereas the federal Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control
Act (FSPTCA), enacted in 2009, prohibited candy- and fruit-flavored
cigarettes, largely because these flavored products were marketed
to youth and young adults, and younger smokers were more likely to have tried these
products than older smokers;
Whereas although the manufacture and distribution of flavored
cigarettes (excluding menthol) is banned by federal law, neither federal nor Massachusetts laws restrict sales
of flavored non-cigarette tobacco products, such as cigars, cigarillos,
smokeless tobacco, hookah tobacco, and electronic smoking devices
and the nicotine solutions used in these devices;
Whereas the United States Food and Drug Administration and the
United States Surgeon General have stated that flavored tobacco products
are considered to be "starter" products that help establish smoking
habits that can lead to long-term addiction;
Whereas data from the National Youth Tobacco Survey indicate
that more than 2/5 of United States middle and high school smokers
report using flavored little cigars or flavored cigarettes;
Whereas tobacco companies have used flavorings such as mint
and wintergreen in smokeless tobacco products as part of a "graduation
strategy" to encourage new users to start with products with lower
levels of nicotine and progress to products with higher levels of
nicotine;
Whereas the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
has reported that electronic cigarette use among middle and high school
students doubled from 2011 to 2012;
Whereas nicotine solutions, which are consumed via electronic
smoking devices such as electronic cigarettes, are sold in dozens
of flavors that appeal to youth, such as cotton candy and bubble gum;
Whereas in a lab analysis conducted by the FDA, electronic cigarette
cartridges that were labeled as containing no nicotine actually had
low levels of nicotine present in all cartridges tested, except for
one;
Whereas nonresidential roll-your-own (RYO) machines located
in retail stores enable retailers to sell cigarettes without paying
the excise taxes that are imposed on conventionally manufactured cigarettes.
High excise taxes encourage adult smokers to quit and high prices deter youth from starting. Inexpensive cigarettes, like those produced from RYO machines,
promote the use of tobacco, resulting in a negative impact on public
health and increased health care costs, and severely undercut the
evidence-based public health benefit of imposing high excise taxes
on tobacco;
Whereas it is estimated that 90% of what is being sold as pipe
tobacco is actually being used in nonresidential RYO machines. Pipe
tobacco shipments went from 11.5 million pounds in 2009 to 22.4 million
pounds in 2010. Traditional RYO tobacco shipments dropped from 11.2
million pounds to 5.8 million pounds; and cigarette shipments dropped
from 308.6 billion sticks to 292.7 billion sticks according to the
December 2010 statistical report released by the United States Department
of the Treasury, Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB);
Whereas the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court has held that"
. . . [t]he right to engage in business must yield to the paramount
right of government to protect the public health by any rational means."
Now, therefore it is the intention of the Dalton Board of Health
to regulate the sale of tobacco products.
This regulation is promulgated pursuant to the authority granted
to the Dalton Board of Health by MGL c. 111, § 31, that
"Boards of Health may make reasonable health regulations."
For the purpose of this regulation, the following words shall
have the following meanings:
BLUNT WRAP
Any tobacco product manufactured or packaged as a wrap or
as a hollow tube made wholly or in part from tobacco that is designed
or intended to be filled by the consumer with loose tobacco or other
fillers.
BUSINESS AGENT
An individual who has been designated by the owner or operator
of any establishment to be the manager or otherwise in charge of said
establishment.
CHARACTERIZING FLAVOR
A distinguishable taste or aroma, other than the taste or
aroma of tobacco, menthol, mint or wintergreen, imparted or detectable
either prior to or during consumption of a tobacco product or component
part thereof, including, but not limited to, tastes or aromas relating
to any fruit, chocolate, vanilla, honey, candy, cocoa, dessert, alcoholic
beverage, herb or spice; provided, however, that no tobacco product
shall be determined to have a characterizing flavor solely because
of the use of additives or flavorings that do not contribute to the
distinguishable taste or aroma of the product or the provision of
ingredient information.
CIGAR
Any roll of tobacco that is wrapped in leaf tobacco or in
any substance containing tobacco, with or without a tip or mouthpiece,
not otherwise defined as a cigarette under MGL c. 64C, § 1,
Paragraph 1.
COMPONENT PART
Any element of a tobacco product, including, but not limited
to, the tobacco, filter and paper, but not including any constituent.
CONSTITUENT
Any ingredient, substance, chemical or compound, other than
tobacco, water or reconstituted tobacco sheet, that is added by the
manufacturer to a tobacco product during the processing, manufacturing
or packaging of the tobacco product. Such term shall include a smoke
constituent.
EMPLOYEE
Any individual who performs services for an employer.
EMPLOYER
Any individual, partnership, association, corporation, trust
or other organized group of individuals that uses the services of
one or more employees.
FLAVORED TOBACCO PRODUCT
Any tobacco product or component part thereof that contains
a constituent that has or produces a characterizing flavor. A public
statement, claim or indicia made or disseminated by the manufacturer
of a tobacco product, or by any person authorized or permitted by
the manufacturer to make or disseminate public statements concerning
such tobacco product, that such tobacco product has or produces a
characterizing flavor shall constitute presumptive evidence that the
tobacco product is a flavored tobacco product.
NONRESIDENTIAL ROLL-YOUR-OWN (RYO) MACHINE
A mechanical device made available for use (including to
an individual who produces cigars, cigarettes, smokeless tobacco,
pipe tobacco, or roll-your-own tobacco solely for the individual's
own personal consumption or use) that is capable of making cigarettes,
cigars or other tobacco products. RYO machines located in private
homes used for solely personal consumption are not nonresidential
RYO machines.
PERMIT HOLDER
Any person engaged in the sale or distribution of tobacco
products who applies for and receives a tobacco product sales permit
or any person who is required to apply for a tobacco product sales
permit pursuant to these regulations, or his or her business agent.
PERSON
Any individual, firm, partnership, association, corporation,
company or organization of any kind, including, but not limited to,
an owner, operator, manager, proprietor or person in charge of any
establishment, business or retail store.
RETAIL TOBACCO STORE
An establishment that is not required to possess a retail
food permit whose primary purpose is to sell or offer for sale, but
not for resale, tobacco products and tobacco paraphernalia, in which
the sale of other products is merely incidental, and in which the
entry of persons under the age of 18 is prohibited at all times, and
maintains a valid permit for the retail sale of tobacco products as
required to be issued by the Dalton Board of Health.
SELF-SERVICE DISPLAY
Any display from which customers may select a tobacco product
or a nicotine delivery product without assistance from an employee
or store personnel.
SMOKE CONSTITUENT
Any chemical or chemical compound in mainstream or sidestream
tobacco smoke that either transfers from any component of the tobacco
product to the smoke or that is formed by the combustion or heating
of tobacco, additives or other component of the tobacco product.
SMOKING BAR
An establishment that primarily is engaged in the retail
sale of tobacco products for consumption by customers on the premises
and is required by MGL c. 270, § 22, to maintain a valid
permit to operate a smoking bar issued by the Massachusetts Department
of Revenue. "Smoking bar" shall include, but not be limited to, those
establishments that are commonly known as "cigar bars" and "hookah
bars."
TOBACCO PRODUCT
Any product containing, made, or derived from tobacco or
nicotine that is intended for human consumption, whether smoked, chewed,
absorbed, dissolved, inhaled, snorted, sniffed, or ingested by any
other means, including, but not limited to: cigarettes, cigars, little
cigars, chewing tobacco, pipe tobacco, snuff, or electronic cigarettes,
electronic cigars, electronic pipes, electronic hookah, or other similar
products, regardless of nicotine content, that rely on vaporization
or aerosolization. "Tobacco product" includes any component or part
of a tobacco product. "Tobacco product" does not include any product
that has been approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration
either as a tobacco use cessation product or for other medical purposes
and which is being marketed and sold or prescribed solely for the
approved purpose.
VENDING MACHINE
Any automated or mechanical self-service device, which upon
insertion of money, tokens or any other form of payment, dispenses
or makes cigarettes, any other tobacco products.
No person shall distribute, or cause to be distributed, any
free samples of tobacco products as defined herein. No means, instruments
or devices that allow for the redemption of all tobacco products or
nicotine delivery products for free or cigarettes at a price below
the minimum retail price determined by the Massachusetts Department
of Revenue shall be accepted by any permit holder.
The sale or distribution of tobacco products as defined herein
in any form other than an original factory-wrapped package is prohibited,
including the repackaging or dispensing of any tobacco product as
defined herein for retail sale. No person may sell or cause to be
sold or distribute or cause to be distributed any cigarette package
that contains fewer than 20 cigarettes, including single cigarettes.
All self-service displays of tobacco products as defined herein
are prohibited. All humidors, including, but not limited to, walk-in
humidors must be locked.
All tobacco product, as defined herein, vending machines are
prohibited.
All nonresidential roll-your-own machines are prohibited. (This
does not include RYO you buy from stores and take home. These are
the commercial ones that are creeping up on us.)
Whoever violates any provision of this regulation may be penalized
by the noncriminal method of disposition as provided in MGL c. 40,
§ 21D, or by filing a criminal complaint at the appropriate
venue. Each day any violation exists shall be deemed to be a separate
offense.
If any provision of these regulations is declared invalid or
unenforceable, the other provisions shall not be affected thereby
but shall continue in full force and effect.
This regulation shall take effect on July 8, 2014.