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HB 22-1064

signed

Prohibit Flavored Tobacco Regulate Synthetic Nicotine

Plain-English Summary

AI-generated

HB 22-1064, which has been signed into law, bans the sale and marketing of flavored tobacco products and synthetic nicotine products in Colorado. This includes items like candy-flavored cigarettes but exempts certain types of tobacco such as pipe tobacco, premium cigars, and shisha used in hookahs. The law also provides funding for grants to help communities affected by targeted sales of these products. This means that retailers can no longer sell flavored or synthetic nicotine products, and there are penalties for breaking this rule, similar to those for selling tobacco products to minors.

Official Summary

Section 1 of the bill makes legislative findings. Section 3 prohibits a cigarette, tobacco product, or nicotine product (product) retailer from selling, offering for sale, advertising for sale, displaying, shipping, delivering, or marketing in the state any flavored product, and section 2 defines flavored product as a product imparting a taste or smell other than the taste or smell of tobacco. Section 3 also prohibits the sale, offer for sale, advertising for sale, displaying, or marketing of a synthetic nicotine product and section 2 defines synthetic nicotine as nicotine derived from a source other than tobacco. A retailer, manufacturer of products, or employee or agent of a retailer or manufacturer of products engages in conduct creating a rebuttable presumption that a product is a flavored product if the person makes a public statement or claim, uses text or images, or takes other action directed toward consumers indicating that the product has a taste or smell other than the taste or smell of tobacco. Section 3 exempts pipe tobacco products, premium cigars, and shisha tobacco from the prohibition, as well as exempting a cigar-tobacco bar located in a licensed gaming establishment.Section 4 imposes the same penalties for selling, offering for sale, advertising for sale, displaying, or marketing in the state any flavored product or synthetic nicotine product that apply to unlawful sales of products to minors.Section 5 amends the definition of product to include products containing synthetic nicotine. and section 2 defines synthetic nicotine as nicotine derived from a source other than tobacco.Section 6 directs the prevention services division in the department of public health and environment (department) to convene a working group to develop, implement, and administer a grant program to award 2-year grants to applicants who are able to provide evidence-informed and individualized wrap-around services in Sections 6 and 7 add to the tobacco education, prevention, and cessation grant program in the department of public health and environment the authority to award grant money to provide resources to communities disproportionately impacted by targeted tobacco and nicotine marketing and sales or by increased or minimally improved tobacco-use and nicotine-use prevalence rates. Section 6 also directs the general assembly to appropriate $10 million from the general fund to the department for the grant program. and by the prevalence of tobacco and nicotine product use. (Note: Italicized words indicate new material added to the original summary; dashes through words indicate deletions from the original summary.) (Note: This summary applies to the reengrossed version of this bill as introduced in the second house.)

Details

Chamber
House
First action
2022-05-10
Latest action
2022-01-14
Last action desc.
Introduced In House - Assigned to Health & Insurance
OpenStates
View source ↗

Sponsors

Votes

PERM
2022-05-04 · House · passYes: 54 · No: 8 · Other:
BILL
2022-05-04 · House · passYes: 35 · No: 27 · Other:
AMD
2022-05-04 · House · passYes: 58 · No: 4 · Other: