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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Hannah Metzger

Colorado lawmakers propose ban on all flavored tobacco, nicotine products

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Selling flavored tobacco and nicotine products could soon be illegal in Colorado after a bill prohibiting the sale of the products was introduced in the state House of Representatives last week.

If passed, House Bill 22-1064 would go into effect on July 1, banning the sale of all flavored tobacco and nicotine products within state lines, including vapes, e-cigarettes, menthol cigarettes, hookah, chewing tobacco and cigars.

State Sen. Kevin Priola, one of the sponsors of the bill, said he was inspired to take action after his son started vaping around the age of 14. Priola said he would constantly search his son’s room for vapes and would have to drive to far-away trash bins to throw them away to prevent his son from digging the vapes out of the trash.

“It’s everywhere. Our experience isn’t unique,” Priola said. “You look at the data and realize, a lot of these manufacturers, they use the flavors to get young kids hooked on it.”

Of tobacco users between 12 and 17 years old, 81% said they started by using flavored products and 79% said they use a product because it comes in flavors they like, according to a study by the Food and Drug Administration and National Institutes of Health.

State Rep. Jennifer Bacon, another sponsor of the bill, recently served on the Denver school board for four years. Bacon said the presence of flavored tobacco and nicotine products is “overwhelming” in Denver schools.

“We’re really concerned about the number of kids getting hooked on nicotine through these flavors. I’ve seen firsthand the impact,” Bacon said. “We’re really hoping to stave off an imminent public health crisis.”

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In contrast, Brian Fojtik, a Denver resident and representative of the National Association of Tobacco Outlets, said the ban is unnecessary because youth tobacco use has been decreasing for years.

In 2020, roughly one in five high school students and one in 20 middle school students used e-cigarettes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 2021, use decreased to roughly one in nine high school students and one in 35 middle school students.

“It's shortsighted approach,” Fojtik said. “Prohibition proponents aren't protecting kids. They're shamefully using kids as political props, attempting to use legitimate concern about youth vaping to ban hundreds of products to adults that youth are not using that have nothing to do with vaping.”

Fojtik argued that the ban would lead to tobacco and nicotine users buying flavored products online or out of state, taking away the tax revenue from Colorado, which helps pay for programs including early childhood education and public health initiatives.

If passed, the ban could also shut down hundreds of independent vape and tobacco stores throughout the state. Phil Guerin, owner of Myxed Up Creations in Denver, said he would lose at least 30% of his store’s business under such a ban.

“There is an obvious disconnection between the representatives and their constituents, the small businesses that the representatives pledge to support,” Guerin said. “Let’s focus on COVID and getting all our kids and teachers back to full strength. Then we can have a conversation, based on science and factual data, on how we can permanently address the prevention of youth vaping.”

State Rep. Kyle Mullica, another sponsor of the bill, said he is committed to working with business owners to help mitigate the impact of the ban; however, he said he must prioritize what’s best for the youth.

“What has to come first is the health of our children,” Mullica said. “This is a line, as sponsors and lawmakers, that we have to walk. The facts are the facts, and that is that our youth are becoming addicted to these products.”

Last month, Denver passed a similar ban prohibiting the sale of flavored tobacco products with exemptions for Hookah, natural cigars, pipe tobacco and harm-reduction tools. Though it passed City Council, the ban was vetoed by Mayor Michael Hancock, marking only the second time Hancock has used his veto authority against the council in his 10 years as mayor.

The bill sponsors said they were confident the bill would make it through the legislature, attributing Hancock’s veto to the belief that flavor bans are a state issue. They said they expect Gov. Jared Polis’ support because of the positive impact the ban would have on public health and lowering health care costs.

Under the bill, any retailer caught selling flavored tobacco/nicotine products would be subject to the same penalties as a retailer caught selling to minors.

The bill would also appropriate $10 million to the Department of Public Health and Environment’s Prevention Services Division, which would award two-year grants to organizations providing wraparound services in communities disproportionately impacted by targeted tobacco and nicotine marketing.

Bacon and Mullica said the bill isn’t just about banning the products, but about protecting communities that have been intentionally targeted by the tobacco and nicotine industry, including youth and communities of color.

“There’s real dollars and real resources going to these communities who have historically been targeted,” Mullica said. “We are working on programs to try to make sure that we’re helping people break this addiction.”

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