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Nj to raise age to buy cigarettes
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Two New Jersey lawmakers proposed Thursday to raise their state’s minimum age for buying cigarettes to 21, reaching across the Hudson River to borrow an idea from New York City in a gesture of regional cooperation to keep tobacco from many young adults.
Justin Sullivan, Getty Images
In the unusual move that highlighted a spirit of alliance between sometime rivals, New Jersey state Sen. Richard Codey and Assemblyman Ruben Ramos unveiled the proposal at New York’s City Hall.
“I think we have to send a message to our young adults to smoke is no joke,” said Codey. As acting governor, he signed a measure raising the age limit from 18 to 19 seven years ago.
While the threshold already has been raised to 21 in two Boston suburbs, the idea has gained more attention since City Council Speaker Christine Quinn and colleagues proposed it in the nation’s biggest city last month. Some state lawmakers have since proposed doing likewise throughout New York. The minimum age is currently 18 in the city and state, although some New York counties have boosted it to 19.
“This has now truly become a regional, if not national, effort,” said Quinn, who noted that a Chicago alderman also has expressed interest in the idea since it was broached in New York City. It had been proposed in the Texas Legislature earlier this year.
Under federal law, no one under 18 can buy tobacco anywhere in the country.
Advocates say higher age limits help stop, or at least delay, young people from developing a habit that remains the leading cause of preventable deaths in the U.S., despite decades of efforts to call attention to its dangers. The measures make it tougher for 18 to 20 year olds to obtain cigarettes for themselves and for younger friends, supporters say.
Representatives for two major tobacco companies Altria Group Inc., which produces the top selling Marlboro brand, and R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., maker of brands including Camel didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment Thursday.
Higher age limits have faced criticism from smokers’ rights advocates who feel the restrictions are unfair and patronizing to an age group considered old enough to make such adult decisions as voting and serving in the military. Some retailers have suggested younger smokers may just turn to black market merchants or to nearby areas with lower age limits.
The New York and New Jersey advocates say that’s a good reason to set the limit at 21 region wide.
New Jersey raised the limit to 19 in 2006, in tandem with a considerably more controversial measure that outlawed smoking in bars, restaurants and most other indoor public places. Codey and Ramos said they planned to introduce the 21 year old limit formally in the state Legislature on Monday.
The measure is progressing in New York’s City Council, with a vote likely sometime this summer. Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who had opposed higher age limits in the past, supports the current plan.
(Copyright 2013 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)