Baltimore Sun

Massachuse­tts bans flavored vaping fluid, menthol cigarettes

- By Philip Marcelo

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

Anti- smoking groups hailed the ban signed by Gov. Charlie Baker, which outlaws the sale of flavored vaping products immediatel­y and of menthol cigarettes starting June 1, 2020.

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

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. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administra­tion are the only ones that can address the issues comprehens­ively, he said.

President Donald 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 the vaping industry 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 Associatio­n, which had opposed the legislatio­n, said in a statement the ban will disproport­ionately affect communitie­s of color and cost the state hundreds of millions of dollars in tax revenue.

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

The law’s new restrictio­ns on flavored tobacco products are important because they have helped the traditiona­l smoking market grow and led to the flavored vaping products popular with youths, state Attorney General 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 flavored 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.

The legislatio­n responds to growing concern about the health effects of vaping products, including deaths whose exact cause is still being investigat­ed.

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

 ?? TONY DEJAK/AP ??
TONY DEJAK/AP

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