Los Angeles Times

No more flavored tobacco or vaping in Massachuse­tts

Menthol cigarettes are included in the first such ban on sales.

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BOSTON — Massachuse­tts became the first state to ban the sale of flavored tobacco and vaping products, including menthol cigarettes, after the governor signed a bill Wednesday that was passed in response to recent deaths linked to e-cigarettes and to reduce their appeal to young people.

Anti-smoking groups hailed the ban signed by Republican Gov. Charlie Baker. It outlaws the sale of flavored vaping products immediatel­y and of menthol cigarettes starting June 1.

Some states have temporaril­y banned or restricted flavored tobacco or vaping products to different degrees, but Massachuse­tts is the first with a permanent ban in place, anti-smoking groups say. Especially notable is its ban on menthol, which is among the most popular flavors and has often been exempted from bans.

California has sued vaping giant Juul, saying it unlawfully targeted minors.

The bill is a “major step forward,” Baker said, but states can do only so much to address the public health emergency around e-cigarettes and other vaping products. Only the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administra­tion can address the issues comprehens­ively, he said.

President Trump has promised for months to approve a national ban on most flavored e-cigarettes. But in recent weeks his administra­tion canceled a planned announceme­nt of a ban, and Trump has said he will meet with vaping industry leaders and medical profession­als instead.

“It’s pretty clear there isn’t going to be a federal policy on this anytime soon,” Baker said Wednesday. “So in the absence of that, we had to act.”

The New England Convenienc­e Store and Energy Marketers Assn., which opposed the law, said in a statement that the ban will disproport­ionately affect communitie­s of color and cost the state hundreds of millions of dollars in tax revenue.

Studies show menthol cigarettes are consumed disproport­ionately by young people and minorities, and anti-tobacco groups and health experts argue that menthol has been marketed in particular to African Americans.

The new flavored products have helped the traditiona­l smoking market grow, state Atty. Gen. Maura Healey said.

“This is not a nanny-state effort,” said Healey, a Democrat. “This is a significan­t public health effort.”

The American Cancer Society’s Cancer Action Network said it hoped the new law would send a message to an industry accused of using flavored products to introduce teenagers to smoking.

“More than 80% of teens who have ever used a tobacco product started with a f lavored product, and the tobacco industry knows this,” the organizati­on said in an emailed statement.

The law places a 75% excise tax on vaping products and requires health insurers, including the state’s Medicaid program, to cover tobacco cessation counseling.

In September, Baker declared a public health emergency and ordered a temporary ban on the sale of all vaping products — flavored and unflavored. He said Wednesday he’ll keep that ban in place until Dec. 11 while his administra­tion drafts additional regulation­s.

 ?? Elise Amendola Associated Press ?? EXPERTS SAY the use of flavored products often leads to regular cigarette use.
Elise Amendola Associated Press EXPERTS SAY the use of flavored products often leads to regular cigarette use.

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