Categories · Teen Smoking/Youth
· Tobacco Control
· Cigars
USA, by State · Maryland
Organizations · Ctfk
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Jump to full article: PR Newswire, 2008-05-28 Author: SOURCE Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids
Intro: Baltimore Mayor Sheila Dixon and Baltimore City Health Department
Commissioner Dr. Joshua Sharfstein have taken an important step to protect
the city's children and health by proposing a new regulation to ban the
sale of individual cigars.
The proliferation of individually sold cigars in recent years threatens
to undermine efforts to prevent kids from smoking. Individual cigars,
including so-called "little cigars," are more affordable to price-sensitive
kids than regular cigarettes because they have lower excise tax rates and
are exempt from state laws setting minimum pack sizes for cigarettes. Most
insidiously, they often come in candy and fruit flavors, such as chocolate,
vanilla, raspberry, cherry and cinnamon. They are often colorfully packaged
and placed next to candy displays in retail outlets. The tobacco companies
have a long history of using sweet flavors to attract new users, almost all
of whom are children. Individually sold cigars also lack health warnings.
According to Baltimore officials, individual cigars are sold for as little
as 69 cents each and in a wide variety of flavors in stores across the
city.
Like cigarettes, cigars are addictive and deadly, causing lung cancer,
other cancers, heart disease and other serious illnesses.
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