HomeMy WebLinkAbout2015 06-09 Mpls. considers restrictions on flavored products STAR TRIBUNE WEST METRO
Mpls. considers restrictions on flavored
tobacco products
Backers of Mpls.proposal say the cigars entice minors
By ERIC ROPER O Star Tribune JUNE 9,2015—9:33AM
�nsiders restrictions c�n flavored tobacco products - StarTril
The sale of flavored cigars in convenience stores could soon come to an end in
Minneapolis,where city officials are mulling the state's first ban on the products at most
traditional locations to curb youth tobacco use.
Anti-smoking advocates and small retailers squared off at a packed City Council hearing
Monday over a proposal that would restrict sales of flavored tobacco products from
more than 300 allowed locations to just under two dozen specialty tobacco shops.
Similar bans have been enacted in New York City and Providence,R.I.
A council committee delayed a vote on the proposal,which targets flavored cigars,
smokeless tobacco,shisha for hookahs and e-cigarette juice—but excludes menthol
flavors.It would also set a minimum price on all cigars at$2.60—echoing measures
passed in Blooming[on,St.Paul,Maplewood and Brooklyn Center.
Supporters said low-cost flavored cigars,sold under brands like White Owl and Swisher
Sweets,are especially harmful because they entice young people to start smoking.A
recent study of 530 underage youth in north Minneapolis found that more than half of
the 313 who had used tobacco reported at one point smoking a cigar or cigarillo.
°Luring people to an addictive product with cheap prices and candy flavors before
they're old enough to know better doesn't...give kids much choice,"testified Latrisha
Vetaw of Northpoint Health and Wellness Center.Some of the non-tobacco flavors
mentioned in the ordinance include chocolate,honey and vanilla,as well as fruits,herbs
and candy.
City records show that 362 businesses are currently authorized to sell tobacco products
in Minneapolis,though about a quar[er of them are bars that largely sell cigarettes.The
proposal would limit flavored tobacco sales to approximately 21"tobacco products
shops,"which generate 90 percent of their revenue from tobacco-related sales.It also
clarifies that customers must be 18 to enter those stores.
Convenience store owners at Monday's hearing challenged the necessity of the change,
noting that it is already illegal for them to sell tobacco to minors.City records show that
out of more than 350 undercover compliance checks each year,only about 6 to 7 percent
result in violations for selling to a minor.
They also said that restricting tobacco sales threatens one of their core revenue streams.
"Forty percent of our sales in the convenience store industry comes from tobacco....
ThaYs the industry average:40 percent,"said Steve Williams,owner of Bobby and
Steve's Auto World,which has several locations."So we're affecting the viability of a lot
of convenience stores."
Ahmad Al-Hawari,who owns four convenience stores around the city,said while
flavored cigars account for less than 5 percent of their business,the change could result
in lost customers.
"A customer will walk or drive to a smoke shop,buy his flavored tobacco as he wishes...
and then he's going to buy cigarettes and pop from there,"Al-Hawari said."He's not
going to go back to the convenience store."
The federal government banned all flavored cigarettes eaccept for menthol in 2009,but
did not apply the same restrictions to cigars.Cigars may also be sold individually,versus
in packs like cigarettes,making a common price about 99 cents each,according to a city
staff report.
Paul Pentel,an internist at Hennepin County Medical Center,said their low cost also
makes cigars an appealing option for adults who already smoke.
"In my clinic,I am very alarmed by the number of patients I see who have switched to
cheap cigars because of the cost of cigarettes,"Pentel said."For these patients,cheap
cigars are a missed opportunity to quit smoking."
New York City banned the sale of flavored tobacco products in 2009,except for at a
handful of tobacco bars.A ban in Providence,R.I.,went into effect in 2013.The state of
Maine has also enacted a ban on small,flavored cigars.
Four Minnesota cities have already established minimum cigar prices.The minimum is
$210 in St.Paul and Brooklyn Center,and$2.60 in Bloomington and Maplewood,city
staff said.
Council Member Blong Yang,a cosponsor of the ordinance change,said he was drawn to I'
the issue after seeing in the recent study from Breathe Free North,a program of �
Northpoint,that children have too much access to flavored tobacco.It also appears to �
be disproportionately affeding minority communities,he said.
"Every single convenience store that you go to it seems has all this stuff right in front of
considers restrictions on flavored tobacco products - StarTr
people,basically,"Yang said."And it's screaming for people to buy it because it's there."
The council's health,environment and community engagement committee is expected to
vote on the measure in two weeks,with a final vote before the full council possible in
July.