Smoking age of 21, vaping restrictions are one step away for California
California is one step away from enacting some of its most significant tobacco legislation in decades.
The state Senate on Thursday approved a far-reaching package of bills that will raise the legal purchase age to 21 from 18 and regulate e-cigarettes like a traditional tobacco product. Six measures now head to Gov. Jerry Brown’s desk, where their fate is uncertain.
If Brown signs the age increase, which includes an exemption for active members of the military, California will follow Hawaii as only the second state with a smoking age of 21. The Senate approved the change on a 26-10 vote.
“The last several months have proven just how much tobacco’s business model depends on their ability to market and sell their poison to our kids,” said Sen. Ed Hernandez, D-Azusa, who authored the bill. “It is time that we take a stand.”
An expanded ban on smoking in workplaces and permission for counties to begin introducing local taxes on tobacco sales were among the other proposal passed Thursday, almost entirely with support from Democratic lawmakers. The only Republican to vote for the most of the bills was Sen. Jeff Stone, a pharmacist from Temecula who cited the detrimental health effects of tobacco as well as his own mother’s death from cancer after years of smoking.
Sen. Cathleen Galgiani, D-Stockton, was the sole Democrat not to vote for either the age increase or the e-cigarette regulations. She said she opposed raising the smoking age to 21 because “it didn’t make sense” to cause “so many changes to retail markets.”
Stalled for months in the Assembly due to fierce industry objections, the tobacco bills were revived in the lower house last week and approved along largely party lines in a raucous floor session where Republicans first tried to block the measures from being heard.
The e-cigarette regulations have been particularly contentious, as the law would place the flourishing product – pitched by supporters as a healthier alternative that can help people stop smoking – under California’s current smoke-free laws, which includes banning them from schools, public buildings and restaurants.
Yet the Senate was mostly free of drama – or even debate – Thursday as they sent the bill to Brown on a 26-11 vote.
Author of the e-cigarette bill, Sen. Mark Leno, D-San Francisco, praised the 26-11 vote to send it to Brown, asserting that the devices are “nothing more than a new delivery system for toxic and addictive nicotine.”
“There is no one checking to see what is in this product. Nobody”
The reason we’re doing this...is to address a growing health crisis assaulting the children of California.
We ought to protect the health and welfare of the children of California.
another generation of nicotine-addicted Californians.
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Alexei Koseff: 916-321-5236, @akoseff
This story was originally published March 10, 2016 at 3:40 PM with the headline "Smoking age of 21, vaping restrictions are one step away for California."