Friday, February 28, 1997
Even twentysomethings need ID to smoke under
new law
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - It's official today: If you're under age 27 and
want to buy cigarettes or chewing tobacco, you have to produce
a photo ID proving you're old enough - at least 18.
The question is how will the government enforce the first wave
of its crackdown on youth smoking.
Tobacco-friendly North Carolina and Virginia flip-flopped Thursday
over enforcement. In addition, the FDA still hasn't hired state
inspectors to audit cigarette retailers' compliance. That means,
at least until summer, anti-tobacco volunteers will have to blow
the whistle on offenders.
"It's going to take an army of citizens," said John
Banzhaf of Action on Smoking and Health, which is organizing thousands
of people to report suspected lawbreakers to an FDA hot line.
He plans to send teens early Friday to test the new law in Washington
and suburban Virginia stores.
State laws already outlaw selling tobacco to anyone under age
18. Yet government figures show minors buy $1.6 billion in tobacco
annually, and 75 percent of teen smokers say they've never been
carded - reports verified in states like Indiana, which last summer
discovered 41 percent of stores selling tobacco to teens.
The FDA, in the first of sweeping new tobacco regulations,
ordered retailers to card all customers younger than 27 to prevent
mature-looking minors from buying tobacco. Store owners caught
selling to teens face federal fines of $250 per violation.
The FDA is contracting with states to send undercover teen-agers
to catch lawbreakers. But the agency still hasn't picked the 10
states to share the first $4 million in enforcement funds, meaning
federal stings won't happen for at least a month, and can't hire
additional states unless Congress forks over more money.
FDA's inspectors could target states that don't do their own
enforcement.
"If we find that a retailer is not complying, we can take
appropriate steps ... wherever he or she lives," warned FDA
spokesman Jim O'Hara.
Virginia and North Carolina, which joined a pending tobacco
industry lawsuit challenging all the FDA's tobacco regulations,
are possible targets.
North Carolina Attorney General Mike Easley said in a statement
early Thursday that pending the judge's ruling, "Our department
does not have authority to enforce the contested tobacco rules."
In a later interview, however, Easley acknowledged: "It is
the law. ... North Carolina law enforcement officers respect the
law, and they will do what they can to enforce it."
Virginia's prosecutor's office initially said it would ignore
the law. But Gov. George Allen quickly repudiated that position,
and Attorney General James Gilmore later told retailers to card
customers "until the courts have ruled."
While cigarette makers say Friday's change doesn't affect them,
retailers predicted longer lines as they card customers who buy
tobacco 26 million times a day.
The National Association of Convenience Stores advised 1 million
store employees to tell irate customers they're just doing a job
the feds foisted on them.
"I don't know if I can do this," said an Alexandria,
Va., 7-11 clerk who would identify herself only as Janice. "People
already yell when you card them for beer."
"You can't card everyone all the time. It's not worth
the hassle," said Cathy Beattie, co-owner of Marty's First
Stop in Danville, Vt.
But stores are getting the message. Retiring FDA Commissioner
David Kessler, who leaves the post after a White House tobacco
ceremony Friday, was handed a notice at his local 7-11 warning
customers to bring ID.
"If you want to go buy a beer at the ballpark, you'll
be carded," Kessler said. "It's really time to start
taking seriously as a nation the sale of tobacco products to young
people."
Some states won't notice a big difference Friday. In Florida,
where aggressive inspectors have caught just 18 percent of retailers
selling to minors, lawbreakers simply will pay more - the $250
FDA penalty plus existing $500 state fines.
Michigan said it wants to enforce the law but can't until FDA
sends money and instructions. And Indiana Attorney General Jeffrey
Modisett doesn't expect to start teen stings until May, as he
awaits FDA funding to increase the mere 50 officers who now enforce
both alcohol and tobacco rules.
"The federal dollars are the key," Modisett said.
The FDA hot line is 888-FDA-4KIDS.
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Abilene Reporter-News / Texnews / E.W. Scripps. Publications
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