Substantial scientific evidence exists that the use of tobacco products causes cancer, heart disease, and various other medical diseases. The Surgeon General of the U.S. has found that tobacco-caused diseases are the leading cause of premature, preventable death and disability in the U.S.;
The National Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have found that at least 434,000 Americans die each year from tobacco-caused diseases. The Surgeon General of the U.S. and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services have found that a majority of those Americans who die of tobacco-caused diseases became addicted to nicotine in tobacco products as adolescents before the age of legal consent;
The National Institute on Drug abuse has concluded that the nicotine in tobacco products is a powerful addictive drug and identify nicotine addiction as the most widespread example of drug dependence in the U.S.;
Studies have shown that shoplifting is a common behavior among teens, in fact 1 in 10 teenagers reported shoplifting as their primary means of obtaining cigarettes;
Tobacco is a 'gateway' to other drug dependencies. Kids who smoke heavily (one pack per day) are 3 times more likely to use alcohol, 8 times more likely to use marijuana, and 22 times more likely to use cocaine;
Children are starting to smoke at younger and younger ages. The average age a teen begins smoking is 14½ years old and becomes a daily smoker before age 18. Studies show that if people do not begin smoking as a teenager they will likely never start smoking; and
Representatives of the Retail Grocers' Association have requested that the restrictions set forth in this chapter be made applicable, as well, to tobacco paraphernalia.
Accordingly, the Board of Supervisors of the County of Sacramento finds and declares that, in order to reduce youth access to tobacco products and tobacco paraphernalia, it is necessary to prohibit self-service merchandising of tobacco products and paraphernalia and require only vendor-assisted sales of tobacco products and paraphernalia.
(SCC 1068 § 1, 1997)