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30 New Tobacco State Legislative Bills to Watch
The National Association of Tobacco Outlets (NATO) provides and update on over 30 new tobacco legislative bills introduced in various states.
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Bad for pipe smokers but possible good for B&Ms.And this is why cellaring tobacco matters
North Dakota: House Bill 1357 prohibits the shipping of tobacco products to any consumer in the state by sellers located within or outside the state; requires the sale of tobacco products to any consumer to be face-to-face transactions.
Now many more employers will pull a Scotts Lawn Products and force employees to quit all tobacco use.Bad for pipe smokers but possible good for B&Ms.
I found a couple to be interesting. Like this one:
West Virginia: House Bill 2399 repeals provision prohibiting employers from discriminating for use of tobacco products.
Agreed. What are we up to,...five states now where it isn't?Honestly, I'm just surprised that cross-border shipping is still legal. Hopefully it stays that way
The smart states don't ban it, but just enact state and excise tax collection so they get what they want out of it....revenue. Who cares where it comes from as long as they get their due tax collection, which is fine.Agreed. What are we up to,...five states now where it isn't?
I can see annual purchase trips for folks in the future. Already happening with cigarettes in NY.The smart states don't ban it, but just enact state and excise tax collection so they get what they want out of it....revenue. Who cares where it comes from as long as they get their due tax collection, which is fine.
Last time I shipped a pipe a couple months ago, I had a question with customs. And the lady at the desk made sure it was a "tobacco pipe" and had no tobacco in it. Not allowed to ship tobacco in Wisconsin anymore.The smart states don't ban it, but just enact state and excise tax collection so they get what they want out of it....revenue. Who cares where it comes from as long as they get their due tax collection, which is fine.
It’s such short sighted vision to ban vs. enact out of state tax collection, regardless of the item because people will go elsewhere to buy what they want. It just becomes a revenue loss for the state on a legal item otherwise.Last time I shipped a pipe a couple months ago, I had a question with customs. And the lady at the desk made sure it was a "tobacco pipe" and had no tobacco in it. Not allowed to ship tobacco in Wisconsin anymore.
The do-gooders are not party specific.The liberal do-gooders just won't let it go. They're torturing us like we were some kinds of maniacs that are going to take their children to hell. Bulletin your kids are going to hell anyway because you haven't a clue how to raise them ("My kid wouldn't lie to me").
Between taxing us for everything under the sun and implying the problem it is our fault there's the never-ending battle with them trying to make smoking totally illegal.
And our response to this is to keep voting those same people into office.
Me too. I figured this would have gone along time ago. Cellar deep boys!Honestly, I'm just surprised that cross-border shipping is still legal. Hopefully it stays that way
apparently, they had adopted this style of controlling retail sales and tobacconist businesses somewhere in Scandinavia.And this is why cellaring tobacco matters
North Dakota: House Bill 1357 prohibits the shipping of tobacco products to any consumer in the state by sellers located within or outside the state; requires the sale of tobacco products to any consumer to be face-to-face transactions.
North Dakota is as close to having an all Republican legislature as it can have, about 90%.The do-gooders are not party specific.
My employer has had a no-tobacco hiring policy since before I started with them. We're a large airline based on the US west coast but flying all over several countries. This hiring policy keeps health insurance costs down; they actually nicotine test along with your pre-employment drug test.Now many more employers will pull a Scotts Lawn Products and force employees to quit all tobacco use.
Here’s my concern.My employer has had a no-tobacco hiring policy since before I started with them. We're a large airline based on the US west coast but flying all over several countries. This hiring policy keeps health insurance costs down; they actually nicotine test along with your pre-employment drug test.
However, it has been determined to be unenforceable for current employees. Thus, after you're hired you will never be nicotine tested again and there is no enforcement for current employees. I don't smoke enough for it to matter to me either way, but we have guys who were hired before the policy and some hired after who subsequently developed heavy cigarette habits and smoke openly with no problems.
This has always been my concern as well. Thankfully tobacco to North Carolinians is like ice to Eskimos so if anything I imagine it'd be one of the last bastions to fall.Honestly, I'm just surprised that cross-border shipping is still legal. Hopefully it stays that way