International Laws requires that purchasers of tobacco products must be at least 18 years of age.
Items:0
Total:$ 0.00
LAST NEWS
2010-09-03
Conn. cigarette tax hike raises more than expected
Connecticut's $1-a-pack tax hike on cigarettes has brought in $5 million more in revenue than expected since the increase went into place last October.
http://www.timesunion.com/
2010-05-15
Feds arrest ex-Orland shopkeep
Federal authorities have extradited a onetime Orland Park tobacco shop owner from Germany who is under investigation for allegedly funneling money to a Lebanese organization that the United States has designated as “hostile,” the Chicago Sun-Times is reporting.
http://www.southtownstar.com/
2010-04-09
Majority Will Vote For Smoking Ban
It passed the legislature and was signed by the governor. South Dakota's smoking ban was set to go into effect last July.
http://www.keloland.com/
2010-03-22
Tobacco farmers trying to save water-soaked crop
While some Wisconsin tobacco producers should have a good crop this year, the area's extremely wet August is expected to make for a down year overall.
http://www.courierlifenews.com/
2010-03-12
Reynolds Loses Cigarette Case
A Vermont state judge ruled Wednesday that R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. made false and misleading marketing claims last decade to sell its Eclipse cigarette brand, in a case that highlighted a fierce debate over so-called reduced-harm cigarettes.
http://online.wsj.com/

Tobacco News


Should We Require `Fire-Safe' Smokes?
USA:
· Connecticut
Source:Courant.com,2007-04-27
For almost a century, public debate about fire safety and cigarettes has included discussions about making "fire-safe" cigarettes, which use special banded papers that are self-extinguishing unless a smoker puffs on them. For decades, attempts to pass federal and state laws mandating the sale of fire-safe cigarettes failed, despite claims that unattended cigarettes spark fires that kill an average of 700 to 900 people nationwide each year.

But in 2004, New York state adopted a law banning sales of all cigarettes that are not fire-safe. Since then several other states, including California, Illinois and most recently Oregon, have passed similar legislation. In Connecticut, state lawmakers are considering such a law.

"Tested technology, creating cigarettes that have a reduced ignition propensity, which is the technical phrase for fire-safe cigarettes, meaning that the cigarettes self-extinguish if left alone, already exists.

Cigarette companies have been making them and selling them throughout various regions of the country.

Cigarette manufacturers are required to produce and sell fire-safe cigarettes throughout all of Canada, New York state, Vermont, California, and legislation recently signed in Illinois, New Hampshire and Massachusetts require fire-safe cigarettes in those states.

The remaining New England states, Connecticut, Maine and Rhode Island, are also considering fire-safe cigarette legislation in this session.

Prior to the remaining three New England states, 25 percent of the citizens of America will be protected by fire-safe cigarette legislation.

One in four of the fatalities caused by cigarettes are not the smokers. They are someone else in the house, whether it be a child or a family member or someone who's spending the night, a friend of the children, a sleepover or something along that line.

There is a standardized test that already exists, [American Society for Testing and Materials] test E-2187, which certifies that the cigarettes meet this performance standard so that technology does not need to be invented.

And once the brand is certified to that test, it can be used in multiple states.

The banded technology does not limit the production of the cigarette. And sales and revenue figures from cigarette retailers were not affected in New York state in the follow-up studies that they've done since that legislation was passed there."
 

All registered trademarks are the properties of their respective owners. We do not claim to be
affiliated with the manufactures or tobacco company.