By Melissa Patrick
Kentucky Health News
A bill to reduce underage vaping by limiting legal sales to products approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and creating a database of retailers that sell the products, passed the legislature in its closing minutes Thursday night and was delivered to Gov. Andy Beshear for his signature or veto.
Opponents of the bill say it would not curb underage use of vape products, but will hurt small businesses and help large companies that lobbied for it.
Rep. Rebecca Raymer |
"Both he and I shared the goal of getting these vape products off the market that were being geared toward our children," Raymer said at the Senate Judiciary Committee meeting held hours before it passed the Senate and won concurrence in the House.
The bill passed the Senate 29-7-1 on Thursday, March 28. Sen. Karen Berg, D-Louisville, cast the "pass" vote. Voting no were Republicans Shelley Funke Frommeyer of Alexandria, Jimmy Higdon of Lebanon, Robby Mills of Henderson, Adrienne Southworth of Lawrenceburg and Stephen West of Paris, and Democrats Robin Webb of Grayson and David Yates of Louisville.
The House agreed to the changes and sent the amended bill to Beshear on a 64-27 vote, ending a day of debate that began in the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Committee discussion
Raymer said HB 11 simply lines up Kentucky's law with what the FDA says is legal, noting that the majority of vaping products being confiscated in schools are flavored disposable products form China.
"And they are illegal in China, and they're only being made for sale in the U.S.," she said, adding later, "We are not making anything illegal. We are simply following what the FDA has put in place."
Troy LeBlanc, a retailer and manufacturer of vape products, spoke against the bill, stating that it is "essentially creating a monopoly for Juul. It's one of the very few products that would be left." Juul is a Japanese company in which Altria Group, formerly Philip Morris Cos., owns a 35% stake.
"I would have to close my stores, and closing my stores means I fire 50 people here in the state," LeBlanc asserted. "And we simply can't compete having vape stores have the exact same 15-20 products as every gas station," which he said are the biggest source of vapes for underage people.
He said transcripts from an earnings calls with Altria show that if electronic cigarettes are restricted, the company's earnings per share will go up because they will sell more tobacco. "It's the reason why they're pushing this bill so hard," he said. Kentucky Lantern reports that Altria is pushing similar bills in other states.
He added, "This bill is not going to keep them out of the hands of kids" because they will buy them online. "Do we want our kids ordering in bulk from China? . . . these are going to order them in bulk and take them to school and use them and sell them."
Senate debate
Yates said he didn't think the bill would protect minors. He called for future bills to limit the sale of vape products in places that only serve those 21 and older and to put more money into enforcement. This bill, he said, will put "mom and pop" vape shops out of business.
"Against the best efforts, we are creating a monopoly for one particular brand," he said. "We are getting rid of the other brands that even have lower nicotine products in them."
The final version of the bill defined "authorized vapor product" to only include vapor products and added online retailers. It did not include the product directory from Storm's original bill, and it kept the stiffer penalties from Raymer's bill.
Asked about the online sale of these products, Storm told reporters, "If you're an online retailer and you're going to do business in Kentucky, you need to make sure that your items are compliant. And if not, you're gonna be held accountable."
HB 11 would only allow FDA-approved vaping products to be sold in Kentucky, along with those that have received a "safe harbor certification" for products that fall under several qualifications, including those that remain under review, but has not yet been denied or approved for sale.
It would also require businesses that sell vaping products to acknowledge that in their annual business filings with the secretary of state, who would send a list monthly to the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control and the Department of Revenue. ABC, which is already responsible for enforcing laws aimed at limting youth smoking, would be responsible for creating a system that identifies and publishes the retailers who violate the law.If the bill becomes law, it would fine retailers $100 to $500 for a first offense of selling vaping products to anyone under 21, which is consistent with existing law. The penalty for a second offense would be $1,000 and $5,000 for a third or subsequent violation. A retailer with a fourth violation in two years would be banned from selling vapes. The bill also sets fines for manufacturers and wholesalers.
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