Shopping cart
  • Items0
  • Shipping$0
  • Total$0

 

Visit Shopping Cart
Voting poll

At what step do You have troubles?

Tobacco News rss
  • 22.11.2011 Region’s Illegal Tobacco Sales Spike

    More than a third of businesses that officials recently checked in southwest North Dakota sold discount cigarette online to minors, according to information released by the Southwestern District Health Unit on Friday.“We were very, very surprised when we saw the results,” said Tammy Hovet, Tobacco Prevention and Control project coordinator for SWDHU.Twenty-two of 63 businesses checked in eight counties sold online cigarettes to minors in September and October, she said. The data shows a sharp spike in illegal sales, since a check of 65 businesses in the same counties in June turned up...

  • 20.11.2011 Alexandria Tobacco Users Are Unhappy With New Law

    There is a certain irony to it, some have said.Smokers in Alexandria will have to leave local discount cigarettes stores to light up the products they just bought there.At least 25 feet from the stores to be exact, starting Jan. 1 after the Alexandria City Council passed an ordinance Oct. 4 banning smoking cigarettes in businesses previously exempt from state and local smoking cigarettes bans, including bars and buy cigarettes stores.And some tobacco users are not happy."They think the City Council way overstepped their boundaries," said Vonne Neal, owner of Alexandria's Smoke Shop." With...

  • 09.11.2011 Southern Board Bans Tobacco

    All of Southern University’s campuses will ban cigarettes store starting in January, the Southern Board of Supervisors decided.The move makes Southern the first college system in Louisiana to ban all cigarettes products. Nicholls State University became the first public college in Louisiana to become tobacco free at the beginning of this calendar year.Southern University System President Ronald Mason Jr. said the new policy is about promoting healthy lifestyles and setting a quality standard for all of higher education.“We’re going to look at it as the beginning of a cultural...

  • 18.10.2011 New Jersey Considers New Taxes On Non-cigarette Tobacco Products

    Little cigars, which are taking increasing space on area tobacco-shop shelves, are shaped and smoked just like cigarettes. But because New Jersey taxes them differently, they cost nearly one-third the price.Over the past several years, increased state and federal taxes have helped turn some smokers on to less-taxed cigarettes store products, local shop owners and anti-smoking cigarettes groups say.New Jersey has a $2.70 tax per cigarette pack, and the federal government has a $1.01 excise tax it enacted two years ago.That sixth-highest cigarette tax in the country may entice more smokers to...

  • 10.09.2011 Free Patches For Smokers

    Quitting smoking cigarettes just got a little easier. For a limited time, the California Smokers' Helpline is sending callers from Nevada County free nicotine patches. Eligible cigarettes store users who call 1-800-NO-BUTTS and enroll in the free telephone-based cessation program will receive a free two-week starter kit of patches, while supplies last.The patches are an FDA-approved treatment proven to help smokers kick the habit. They release nicotine into the bloodstream through the skin, reducing withdrawal symptoms and slowly weaning smokers off nicotine. Nevada County was one of 34...

Budget Cut May Yield Weakened Smoke Ban

Anti-cigarettes advocates Thursday said Ohio's four-year ban on smoking cigarettes in indoor public places could be endangered by a lack of enforcement funding.

"... Without the threat of fines and penalties, businesses may have no incentive to follow the law," Marianne Farmer, senior policy director for the American Cancer Society, said.

The Ohio Smoke Free Workplace Act, approved by voters in 2006, places the responsibility for enforcing the complaint-driven law with the Ohio Department of Health.

But the state has largely delegated that duty to local boards of health. As fines go uncollected, some counties have turned that responsibility back over to the state.

The $55.7 billion, two-year budget under consideration in the Senate provides no money for following up on complaints of alleged violations. The state provided $1 million for that purpose this year.

The proposed budget also would phase out funding for the "quit line" through which smokers seek help to kick the habit. The budget for the hot line would go from $6 million in the current year to $1 million next year, a cut of 83 percent. It would be zeroed out in 2013, although it has been the beneficiary of some federal funding.

Ohio's strict ban, with few exceptions, prohibits smoking cigarettes in restaurants, bars, offices, and nearly all other enclosed places that have workers or invite the public in.

Without funding, Ms. Farmer said enforcement would probably be "spotty" across the state.

"I believe there are some health departments that have committed to trying to enforce the law out of their own resources, but we know that having a law enforced uniformly across the state does help create a level playing field," Ms. Farmer said. "We certainly feel that, just like any other law of the state of Ohio, we would expect state dollars would go to enforcement."

The proposed funding levels were included in Gov. John Kasich's budget plan and did not change when the bill passed the House last month.

Dr. Ted Wymslo, director of the Ohio Department of Health, plans to ask the Senate to put $1 million a year into enforcement and $2 million a year into the "quit line," according to spokesman Robert Jennings.

"It is the law, and the law requires the Department of Health to enforce it," Mr. Jennings said. "The 'quit line' will continue. It's just a question of at what level it will continue."

Toledo-Lucas County Deputy Health Commissioner Larry Vasko said the local department intends to keep enforcing the law despite a lack of state resources.

"Our department is owed 90 percent of all of the fines collected from businesses," Mr. Vasko said. "There are $248,000 in outstanding fines. We think it is imperative that the legislature and others in Columbus help us to collect those fines. If we were able to have those fines collected, we could be OK. But without the fines, the state funding is really important."

Pamela Butler, Wood County health commissioner, said her department continues to enforce the smoking cigarettes ban, but said the future is unclear.

"At this point and time, we've been picking up a lot of those costs," Ms. Butler said. "We've submitted for reimbursements from the state fines, and those have been at the attorney general's office. Many of those across the state have not been collected. At this point, I'm not sure what we're going to be doing."

Despite the proposed funding levels, Kasich spokesman Rob Nichols said the governor supports the ban.

"There's a certain reality of living with an $8 billion [budget] hole," Mr. Nichols said. "It's not necessarily a reflection of the value of a particular program. Tough decisions need to be made under unprecedented budgetary pressures."

Maurice Thompson is attorney for the 1851 Center for Constitutional Law that has been fighting the ban in court. He said opponents of the law, primarily bar owners, have pushed lawmakers and the administration to do something about the ban.

"They're all about jobs, jobs, jobs, and the smoking cigarettes ban is costing bar owners and workers a lot of jobs," Mr. Thompson said. "It doesn't hurt restaurants that much, but it definitely hurts bars and the state in terms of jobs and sales tax collections."

The 1851 Center's case pending before the Ohio Supreme Court challenges how the smoking cigarettes ban has been enforced, in part because it has focused on the business owner who allows smoking cigarettes in his establishment rather than on the individual who lights up.

The case involves a Columbus bar that racked up some $30,000 in unpaid fines as a repeat violator.

"I've advised all of my clients who owe fines not to pay those fines, because the law was being enforced in an unconstitutional manner," Mr. Thompson said.

Other cigarettes news and tobacco market events you can find at links bellow:

   • Best-Buy-Cigarettes.Com Tobacco News

   • Discount Cigarettes & Tobacco News

   • Discount Cigarettes Tobacco News




cigarettes payment CigaretteON friend referral Tell a Friend


Pay Attention: Cigarettes or other tobacco smoking products are dangerous and can seriously harm your health. Cigarette smoke contains tar and carbon monoxide.

By selecting any cigarette brand for purchase, you are legally confirming that you are at least the legal age to buy cigarettes or other tobacco products in your state.

We ship only to U.S.A. addresses. Cigarettes orders must not be made with the intent to distribute these purchases to minors.

We also understand that making a purchase online involves a great deal of trust on your part. CigarettesON.net take this trust very seriously, and make it our highest priority to ensure the security and confidentiality of the information you provide when buying cigarettes online. From this reason all credit card transactions are secure and encrypted.


 

Copyright © 2005-2012 CigarettesOn.Net