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New York's law to raise age for sales of tobacco, e-cigarettes from 18 to 21 goes into effect Nov. 13

Posted 11/11/19

New York's law raising the minimum age for tobacco and electronic cigarette product sales is in effect beginning Nov. 13 in St. Lawrence County and the rest of the state. “The goal of this law is …

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New York's law to raise age for sales of tobacco, e-cigarettes from 18 to 21 goes into effect Nov. 13

Posted

New York's law raising the minimum age for tobacco and electronic cigarette product sales is in effect beginning Nov. 13 in St. Lawrence County and the rest of the state.

“The goal of this law is simple -- to prevent cigarettes and vaping products from getting into the hands of our youth, creating an addiction to a deadly habit," Gov. Andrew Cuomo said. "We are taking aggressive action to make sure the decades of progress we've made to combat tobacco addiction is not undone by a sharp rise in e-cigarette use among younger New Yorkers."

According to Department of Health data, nearly 40 percent of 12th grade students and 27 percent of high school students in New York State are now using e-cigarettes, and this increase is largely driven by flavored e-liquids.

High school use in 2018 (27.4%) is 160 percent higher than it was in 2014 (10.5%). While New York's high school student smoking rate dropped from 27.1% in 2000 to a record low of 4.3% in 2016, aggressive marketing promoting flavored e-cigarettes stands to turn that trend. Flavoring is a key youth marketing strategy of the vaping/aerosol industry just as it is in the cigarette, cigar, and smokeless tobacco markets.

E-cigarette marketing highlights flavors such as mint, chocolate, bubblegum and cherry cola, and creates a mistaken belief that they are not harmful to users. Studies show nearly 78% of high school students, and 75% of middle school students report being exposed to pro-tobacco marketing in 2016.

To further crack down on retailers selling tobacco and vaping products to underage youth, New York State Police is partnering with the Department of Health to conduct undercover investigations across the state under The Adolescent Tobacco Use Prevention Act, which enlists underage youth to attempt to buy tobacco and e-cigarette products.