HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

H.B. NO.

2507

THIRTIETH LEGISLATURE, 2020

H.D. 1

STATE OF HAWAII

 

 

 

 

 

 

A BILL FOR AN ACT

 

 

RELATING TO HEALTH.

 

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:

 


     SECTION 1.  The legislature finds that a study published by Theodore Slotkin, a neuroscientist at Duke University, demonstrates that nicotine has a similarly harmful effect on developing brains as chlorpyrifos, a chemical agent used in pesticides that was banned in the State by Act 45, Session Laws of Hawaii 2018.  The legislature further finds that exposure to nicotine in utero can cause serious harm to children, ranging from death due to sudden infant death syndrome to learning and behavioral problems later in life.  In recognition of the damage that nicotine can inflict on developing brains, Hawaii was the first state to raise the legal smoking age to twenty-one in 2016.

     In 2013, the federal Food and Drug Administration contracted with the Institute of Medicine to convene a committee to study the impact of raising the minimum age for purchase of tobacco products to either twenty-one or twenty-five years.  In its study, the Institute of Medicine found that raising the minimum age to twenty-five would lead to a significant decrease in smoking prevalence as well as substantial reductions in smoking-related mortality.

The legislature finds that all tobacco products, including electronic smoking devices, severely contribute to the injurious health burdens currently harming our State and country.  Furthermore, the legislature finds that smoking has reached epidemic proportions and, despite efforts to reverse smoking trends, the problem gets worse each year.  Ensuring the quality of health, life, and opportunity for society today, and for future generations, is a great benefit to public health and a vital public necessity.

     According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, cigarette smoking is the leading preventable cause of death in the United States.  With more than four hundred eighty thousand deaths due to smoking each year in the United States, approximately one in five deaths are caused by cigarettes annually, equaling to around one thousand three hundred deaths every day.  More than sixteen million Americans are living with a disease caused by cigarette smoking alone, and life expectancy for smokers is at least ten years shorter than for non-smokers.  For every person who dies because of smoking, at least thirty people live with a serious smoking‑related illness.

     In 2004, the United States Surgeon General's report concluded that smoking causes many diseases and other adverse effects such as: cancer, heart disease, lung diseases, diabetes, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, which includes emphysema and chronic bronchitis.  Smoking also increases risk for tuberculosis, certain eye diseases, and problems of the immune system, including rheumatoid arthritis.

     The American Cancer Society reports that pregnant women who smoke risk the health and lives of their unborn babies.  The nicotine, carbon monoxide, and other toxins in tobacco smoke enter the mother's bloodstream, go into the baby's body, and can keep the baby from getting the key nutrients and oxygen it needs to grow and develop.  Almost every developing organ system is affected by the chemicals in tobacco smoke.  This increases the risk of serious complications such as miscarriage, premature delivery, stillbirth, infant death, low birth weight, smaller head circumference, slightly higher risk of heart defects, cleft lip or palate, and hearing problems.

     Some research has also suggested that children whose mothers smoked while pregnant or who have been exposed to secondhand smoke, even in small amounts, have a higher risk for: having attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD); being slower learners in school; being more likely to have high blood pressure, asthma, ear infections, tonsillitis, or cavities; having impaired lung function; being overweight or obese compared to children of non-smokers; and being more likely to smoke when they get older.

     Many people who wish to quit smoking have turned to electronic smoking devices.  The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that although the aerosol of electronic smoking devices generally has fewer harmful substances than cigarette smoke, electronic smoking devices and other products containing nicotine are not safe to use during pregnancy, and quitting all forms of tobacco products, including electronic smoking devices, is the best choice for pregnant women and their babies.  The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention further reports that most smokers become addicted to nicotine, a drug that is found naturally in tobacco, and that more people in the United States are addicted to nicotine than to any other drug.  Research suggests that nicotine may be as addictive as heroin, cocaine, or alcohol, thus, explaining why quitting smoking is very hard and may require several attempts.  People who stop smoking often start again because of withdrawal symptoms, stress, and weight gain.  According to the American Addiction Centers, nicotine is one of the top five hardest drugs to quit.  Nicotine is a health danger for pregnant women and developing babies and can damage a developing baby's brain and lungs.  Also, some of the flavorings used in electronic smoking devices may be harmful to a developing baby.

     The American Pregnancy Association reports that between twelve to twenty per cent of pregnant women smoke, putting themselves and their babies at risk, and that over one thousand babies in the United States die each year because their mothers smoked while pregnant.  The legislature is cognizant that these disturbing statistics reflect only the results disclosed, and that the actual percentage of women who smoke while pregnant as well as the number of babies negatively affected in utero by their mothers who smoked may be significantly higher.

     Admittedly, nearly seven in ten adult cigarette smokers want to stop smoking and more than five in ten adult cigarette smokers have tried to quit smoking in the past year.  The thirty‑first tobacco-related report by the United States Office of the Surgeon General includes a description of tobacco use amongst young adults ages nineteen through twenty-five, including the epidemiology, causes, and health effect of tobacco use and interventions to prevent it.  Scientific evidence contained in the reports supports the fact that prevention efforts must include focus on young adults eighteen through twenty-five years old.  According to the report, almost no one starts smoking after age twenty-five.  Nearly nine out of ten smokers started smoking by age eighteen, and ninety-nine per cent started by age twenty-six.  Progression from occasional to daily smoking almost always occurs before age twenty-six.

     Accordingly, the legislature finds that it is essential for the public health, safety, and welfare of the State to increase the minimum age at which one can purchase or possess any tobacco product, including electronic smoking devices.  Therefore, the purpose of this Act is to reduce the harmful effects that smoking has on society by prohibiting the sale or furnishing of tobacco products, including electronic smoking devices, to persons under twenty-five years of age.

     SECTION 2.  Section 712-1258, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "§712-1258  Tobacco products and electronic smoking devices; persons under [twenty-one] twenty-five years of age.  (1)  It shall be unlawful to sell or furnish a tobacco product in any shape or form or an electronic smoking device to a person under [twenty-one] twenty-five years of age.

     (2)  All persons engaged in the retail sale of tobacco products or electronic smoking devices shall check the identification of tobacco product or electronic smoking device purchasers to establish the age of the purchaser if the purchaser reasonably appears to be under [twenty-seven] thirty‑five years of age.

     (3)  It shall be an affirmative defense that the seller of a tobacco product or an electronic smoking device to a person under [twenty-one] twenty-five years of age in violation of this section had requested, examined, and reasonably relied upon a photographic identification from the person establishing that person's age as at least [twenty-one] twenty-five years of age prior to selling the person a tobacco product or an electronic smoking device.  The failure of a seller to request and examine photographic identification from a person under [twenty-one] twenty-five years of age prior to the sale of a tobacco product or an electronic smoking device to the person shall be construed against the seller and form a conclusive basis for the seller's violation of this section.

     (4)  Signs using the statement, "The sale of tobacco products or electronic smoking devices to persons under [twenty‑one] twenty-five is prohibited", shall be posted on or near any vending machine in letters at least one-half inch high and at or near the point of sale of any other location where tobacco products or electronic smoking devices are sold in letters at least one-half inch high.

     (5)  It shall be unlawful for a person under [twenty-one] twenty-five years of age to purchase or possess any tobacco product or electronic smoking device, as those terms are defined in subsection (7).  This provision does not apply if a person under the age of [twenty-one,] twenty-five, or eighteen with parental authorization, is participating in a controlled purchase as part of a law enforcement activity or a study authorized by the department of health under the supervision of law enforcement to determine the level of incidence of tobacco or electronic smoking devices sales to persons under [twenty‑one] twenty-five years of age.

     (6)  Any person who violates subsection (1) or (4), or both, shall be fined $500 for the first offense.  Any subsequent offenses shall subject the person to a fine not less than $500 nor more than $2,000.  Any person under [twenty-one] twenty-five years of age who violates subsection (5) shall be fined [$10] $50 for the first offense.  Any subsequent offense shall subject the violator to a fine of [$50] $100, no part of which shall be suspended, or the person shall be required to perform not less than forty-eight hours nor more than seventy-two hours of community service during hours when the person is not employed and is not attending school.  Any tobacco product or electronic smoking device, as those terms are defined in subsection (7), in the person's possession at the time of violation of subsection (5) shall be seized, summarily forfeited to the State, and destroyed by law enforcement following the conclusion of an administrative or judicial proceeding finding that a violation of subsection (5) has been committed.  The procedures set forth in chapter 712A shall not apply to this subsection.

     (7)  For the purposes of this section:

     "Electronic smoking device" means any electronic product that can be used to aerosolize and deliver nicotine or other substances to the person inhaling from the device, including but not limited to an electronic cigarette, electronic cigar, electronic cigarillo, or electronic pipe, and any cartridge or other component of the device or related product.

     "Tobacco product" means any product made or derived from tobacco that contains nicotine or other substances and is intended for human consumption or is likely to be consumed, whether smoked, heated, chewed, absorbed, dissolved, inhaled, or ingested by other means.  "Tobacco product" includes but is not limited to a cigarette, cigar, pipe tobacco, chewing tobacco, snuff, snus, or an electronic smoking device.  "Tobacco product" does not include drugs, devices, or combination products approved for sale by the United States Food and Drug Administration, as those terms are defined in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act."

     SECTION 3.  This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date.

     SECTION 4.  Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken.  New statutory material is underscored.

     SECTION 5.  This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2050.


 


 

Report Title:

Tobacco; Tobacco Products; Electronic Smoking Devices; Minimum Age; Tobacco Sales

 

Description:

Prohibits the sale or furnishing of tobacco products, including electronic smoking devices, to persons under twenty-five years of age.  Increases the minimum age from twenty-one years of age to twenty-five years of age for purchase and possession of tobacco products, including electronic smoking devices and increases fines.  Takes effect on 7/1/2050.  (HD1)

 

 

 

The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.