Hawaii 2024 Regular Session

Hawaii House Bill HB833 Compare Versions

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11 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.B. NO. 833 THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2023 STATE OF HAWAII A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO HEALTH. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
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33 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.B. NO. 833
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3131 A BILL FOR AN ACT
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3737 RELATING TO HEALTH.
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4343 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
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4646
4747 SECTION 1. Tobacco use is the single most preventable cause of disease, disability, and death in the United States. Tobacco use continues to be a problem in Hawaii, causing approximately one thousand four hundred deaths per year among adults. An estimated twenty-one thousand children in Hawaii currently under the age of eighteen will ultimately die prematurely from smoking. Tobacco use poses a heavy burden on Hawaii's health care system and economy. Each year, smoking costs approximately $526,000,000 in direct health care expenditures and $387,300,000 in lost productivity in the State. Tobacco products are addictive and inherently dangerous, causing various types of cancer, heart disease, and other serious illnesses. Hawaii has a substantial interest in reducing the number of individuals of all ages who use tobacco products, and a particular interest in protecting adolescents from tobacco dependence and illnesses and premature death associated with tobacco use. Electronic smoking devices, also known as e-cigarettes, are battery-operated products designed to deliver nicotine, flavor, and other chemicals to the user. Electronic smoking devices have quickly evolved since entering the United States marketplace in 2007. Initial products were disposable, resembled the size and shape of conventional cigarettes, and used free-base nicotine; however, the products have evolved to better entice new and younger users. Current products are rechargeable and resemble common objects, such as candy or juice boxes with cartoon charters on them. Products also come in the form of flash drives and highlighters, and typically deliver nicotine salts, which allow higher levels of nicotine to be inhaled more easily by the user. The electronic smoking device industry, including the production of e-liquid in a variety of forms, has grown rapidly. In its Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report dated September 18, 2020, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported that electronic smoking devices have been the most commonly used tobacco product among United States youths since 2014. The United States Surgeon General first issued a warning in 2016 stating that use of electronic smoking devices among the nation's youth and young adults had become a major public health concern. In 2018, the Surgeon General classified the danger of youth use of electronic smoking devices as an epidemic. According to a report titled "E-Cigarette Use Among Youth and Young Adults", the United States Surgeon General explained that ninety-five per cent of all smokers start smoking before the age of twenty-one. As there has been an overall decline in the use of combustible cigarettes over the last decade, there has been a dramatic increase in the use of electronic smoking devices by Hawaii's youth. The rise in use of electronic smoking devices among Hawaii youth is higher than the national average. Between 2011 to 2015, the proportion of youth experimenting with electronic smoking devices increased six-fold among middle school youth and four-fold among high school youth. In 2017, twenty-seven per cent of public middle school students and forty-two per cent of public high school students tried electronic smoking devices. By 2019, thirty-one percent of public middle school students and forty-eight percent of public high school students had used an electronic smoking device. In 2020, eight in ten youth who currently use e-cigarettes reported using a flavored product. These rates are higher than the national average, demonstrate an alarming increase in Hawaii youth nicotine use, and serve to illustrate a bleak future of nicotine addiction in the next generation. Toxicologists have warned that e-liquids pose significant risks to public health, particularly to children. The 2016 Surgeon General's Report further states that if the contents of prefilled cartridges or bottles of e-liquids containing nicotine are ingested, they may cause acute toxicity and possibly death. According to CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report dated September 18, 2020, from November of 2016 to August of 2019, total electronic smoking device unit sales in the United States increased nearly three hundred per cent. Continued monitoring of electronic smoking device sales and use is critical to inform strategies to minimize risk among Hawaii's most vulnerable populations, including youth users. The 2016 Surgeon General's Report found that there are numerous policies and practices that can be implemented at state and local levels to address electronic smoking device use among youth and young adults, including preventing access to electronic smoking devices by youth, increasing taxes imposed upon electronic smoking devices, increasing prices of retail licensure, and regulating electronic smoking device marketing. Additionally, the rapid growth of the electronic smoking device industry, including retail businesses selling electronic smoking devices or e-liquid, necessitates further regulations to protect consumers, such as requiring retailers of e-liquid to obtain a retail tobacco permit. The 2016 Surgeon General's Report found that children and youth are especially vulnerable to the targeted online social and digital media marketing of inexpensive electronic smoking devices offered in enticing concealable forms and e-liquids in various flavors. The United States Food and Drug Administration has expanded its regulatory authority to all tobacco products, including electronic smoking devices, cigars, and hookah and pipe tobacco. While there is federal consensus that electronic smoking devices are tobacco products, Hawaii has no state tobacco tax imposed on electronic smoking devices and e-liquids. While the use of electronic smoking devices and e-liquids also carry the risk of adverse health consequences, these products are currently taxed at a much lower rate than cigarettes. Decades of research have shown that increasing cigarette prices, such as through the imposition of cigarette taxes, can reduce the rate of smoking by adult and youth smokers. As outlined in the 2016 Surgeon General's Report, current findings show this public health policy can likewise be applied to electronic smoking devices and e-liquids to reduce youth consumption. Taxing e-liquids and electronic smoking devices as tobacco products will provide pricing parity between products on the market, which will result in consumer clarity and positive health benefits, including encouraging young, price-conscious consumers to quit smoking or sustain cessation, preventing youth initiation, and reducing consumption among those who continue to use them. The purpose of this Act is to: (1) Establish the criminal offense of unlawful shipment of tobacco products; (2) Amend the definition of "tobacco products" as used in the State's cigarette tax and tobacco tax law to include e-liquid and electronic smoking devices, thereby: (A) Subjecting e-liquids and electronic smoking devices to the excise tax on tobacco products; (B) Requiring retailers of e-liquids or electronic smoking devices to obtain a retail tobacco permit to sell, possess, keep, acquire, distribute, or transport e-liquids or electronic smoking devices; (C) Prohibiting persons from engaging in the business of a wholesaler or dealer of e-liquids or electronic smoking devices without first obtaining a license from the department of taxation; and (D) Applying other requirements of the cigarette tax and tobacco tax law to e-liquids and electronic smoking devices; (3) Increase the license fee for persons engaged as wholesalers or dealers of cigarettes and tobacco products; (4) Increase the retail tobacco permit fee for retailers engaged in the retail sale of cigarettes and tobacco products; and (5) Repeal various statutory provisions relating to electronic smoking devices to avoid conflict with taxation and regulation under the cigarette tax and tobacco tax law. SECTION 2. Chapter 245, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows: "§245- Unlawful shipment of tobacco products; penalty; liability for unpaid taxes. (a) A person or entity commits the offense of unlawful shipment of tobacco products if the person or entity: (1) Is engaged in the business of selling tobacco products; and (2) Ships or causes to be shipped any tobacco products to a person or entity in this State that is not a licensee under this chapter. (b) This section shall not apply to the shipment of tobacco products if any of the following conditions are met: (1) The tobacco products are exempt from taxes as provided by section 245-3(b); or (2) All applicable State taxes on the tobacco products are paid in accordance with the requirements of this chapter. (c) Unlawful shipment of tobacco products is a class C felony if the person or entity knowingly ships or causes to be shipped tobacco products with a value of $10,000 or more in violation of subsection (a). (d) Unlawful shipment of tobacco products is a misdemeanor if the person or entity knowingly ships or causes to be shipped tobacco products with a value of less than $10,000 in violation of subsection (a). (e) For purposes of this section, a person or entity is a licensee if the person's or entity's name appears on a list of authorized licensees published by the department. (f) Notwithstanding the existence of other remedies at law, any person or entity that purchases, uses, controls, or possesses any tobacco products for which the applicable taxes imposed under title 14 have not been paid, shall be liable for the applicable taxes, plus any penalty and interest as provided for by law. (g) For the purpose of this section, "value" means the retail fair market value at the time of the offense." SECTION 3. Section 245-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows: 1. By adding two new definitions to be appropriately inserted and to read: ""Electronic smoking device" means any device that may be used to deliver any aerosolized or vaporized substance to the person inhaling from the device, including but not limited to an electronic-cigarette, electronic-cigar, electronic-pipe, vape pen, or electronic-hookah. "Electronic smoking device" includes any component, part, or accessory of the device, and any substance that may be aerosolized or vaporized by the device, whether or not the substance contains nicotine. "Electronic smoking device" does not include drugs, devices, or combination products authorized for sale by the United States Food and Drug Administration, as those terms are defined in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. "E-liquid" means any liquid or like substance, which may or may not contain nicotine, that is designed or intended to be used in an electronic smoking device, whether or not packaged in a cartridge or other container. "E-liquid" does not include prescription drugs; cannabis for medical use governed by chapter 329; manufactured cannabis products governed by chapter 329D; or medical devices used to aerosolize, inhale, or ingest prescription drugs, including manufactured cannabis products manufactured or distributed in accordance with section 329D‑10(a)." 2. By amending the definition of "tobacco products" to read: ""Tobacco products" means [tobacco in any form,]: (1) Any product containing, made of, or derived from tobacco or nicotine, other than cigarettes or little cigars, that is [prepared or] intended for human consumption [or for personal use by humans,] or is likely to be consumed by inhalation, absorption, or any other means of ingestion, including large cigars and any substitutes thereof other than cigarettes that bear the semblance thereof, snuff, snus, chewing or smokeless tobacco, and smoking or pipe tobacco[.]; (2) Any electronic smoking device as defined in this section and any substance, including e-liquids, that may be aerosolized or vaporized by the device, whether or not the substance contains nicotine; or (3) Any component, part, or accessory of any item described in paragraph (1) or (2), whether or not any of these contains tobacco or nicotine, including but not limited to filters, rolling papers, blunt or hemp wraps, hookahs, and pipes. "Tobacco products" does not mean drugs, devices, or combination products authorized for sale by the United States Food and Drug Administration, as those terms are defined in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act." SECTION 4. Section 245-2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows: "(b) The license shall be issued by the department upon application therefor, in such form and manner as shall be required by rule of the department, and the payment of a fee of [$2.50,] $250, and shall be renewable annually on July 1 for the twelve months ending the succeeding June 30." SECTION 5. Section 245-2.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsections (c) and (d) to read as follows: "(c) The retail tobacco permit shall be issued by the department upon application by the retailer in the form and manner prescribed by the department, and the payment of a fee of [$20.] $50. Permits shall be valid for one year, from December 1 to November 30, and renewable annually. Whenever a retail tobacco permit is defaced, destroyed, or lost, or the permittee relocates the permittee's business, the department may issue a duplicate retail tobacco permit to the permittee for a fee of $5 per copy. (d) A separate retail tobacco permit shall be obtained for each place of business owned, controlled, or operated by a retailer. In seeking a retail tobacco permit, the applicant shall specify whether each place of business sells e-liquid, electronic smoking devices, or both. A retailer that owns or controls more than one place of business may submit a single application for more than one retail tobacco permit. Each retail tobacco permit issued shall clearly describe the place of business where the operation of the business is conducted[.] and whether the place of business sells e-liquid, electronic smoking devices, or both." SECTION 6. Chapter 28, part XII, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed. SECTION 7. Section 245-17, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed. ["[§245-17] Delivery sales. (a) No person shall conduct a delivery sale or otherwise ship or transport, or cause to be shipped or transported, any electronic smoking device in connection with a delivery sale to any person under the age of twenty-one. (b) A person who makes delivery sales shall not accept a purchase or order from any person without first obtaining the full name, birth date, and address of that person and verifying the purchaser's age by: (1) An independently operated third-party database or aggregate of databases that are regularly used by government and businesses for the purpose of age and identity verification and authentication; (2) Receiving a copy of a government issued identification card from the purchaser; or (3) Requiring age and signature verification in the shipment process and upon and before actual delivery. (c) The purchaser shall certify their age before completing the purchaser's order. (d) Any person who violates this section shall be fined $500 for the first offense. Any subsequent offenses shall subject the person to a fine of no less than $500 but no more than $2,000. Any person under twenty-one years of age who violates this section shall be fined $10 for the first offense; provided that any subsequent offense shall subject the person to a fine of $50, no part of which shall be suspended, or the person shall be required to perform no less than forty-eight hours but no more than seventy-two hours of community service during hours when the person is not employed or attending school. (e) The department shall not adopt rules prohibiting delivery sales. (f) For the purposes of this section: "Delivery sale" means any sale of an electronic smoking device to a purchaser in the State where either: (1) The purchaser submits the order for sale by means of a telephonic or other method of voice transmission, the mail or any other delivery service, or the internet or other online service; or (2) The electronic smoking device is delivered by use of the mail or any other delivery service. The foregoing sales of electronic smoking devices shall constitute a delivery sale regardless of whether the seller is located within or without the State. "Electronic smoking device" means any electronic product that can be used to aerosolize and deliver nicotine or other substances to the person inhaling from the device, including but not limited to an electronic cigarette, electronic cigar, electronic cigarillo, or electronic pipe, and any cartridge or other component of the device or related product."] SECTION 8. Section 328J-11.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed. ["[§328J-11.5] Statewide concern. (a) Sales of cigarettes, tobacco products, and electronic smoking devices are a statewide concern. It is the intent of the legislature to regulate the sale of cigarettes, tobacco products, and electronic smoking devices in a uniform and exclusive manner. (b) All local ordinances or regulations that regulate the sale of cigarettes, tobacco products, and electronic smoking devices are preempted, and existing local laws and regulations conflicting with this chapter are null and void. (c) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to limit a county's authority under section 328J-15."] SECTION 9. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date. SECTION 10. If any provision of this Act, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance, is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of the Act that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this Act are severable. SECTION 11. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 12. This Act shall take effect on January 1, 2024. INTRODUCED BY: _____________________________
4848
4949 SECTION 1. Tobacco use is the single most preventable cause of disease, disability, and death in the United States. Tobacco use continues to be a problem in Hawaii, causing approximately one thousand four hundred deaths per year among adults. An estimated twenty-one thousand children in Hawaii currently under the age of eighteen will ultimately die prematurely from smoking. Tobacco use poses a heavy burden on Hawaii's health care system and economy. Each year, smoking costs approximately $526,000,000 in direct health care expenditures and $387,300,000 in lost productivity in the State.
5050
5151 Tobacco products are addictive and inherently dangerous, causing various types of cancer, heart disease, and other serious illnesses. Hawaii has a substantial interest in reducing the number of individuals of all ages who use tobacco products, and a particular interest in protecting adolescents from tobacco dependence and illnesses and premature death associated with tobacco use.
5252
5353 Electronic smoking devices, also known as e-cigarettes, are battery-operated products designed to deliver nicotine, flavor, and other chemicals to the user. Electronic smoking devices have quickly evolved since entering the United States marketplace in 2007. Initial products were disposable, resembled the size and shape of conventional cigarettes, and used free-base nicotine; however, the products have evolved to better entice new and younger users. Current products are rechargeable and resemble common objects, such as candy or juice boxes with cartoon charters on them. Products also come in the form of flash drives and highlighters, and typically deliver nicotine salts, which allow higher levels of nicotine to be inhaled more easily by the user.
5454
5555 The electronic smoking device industry, including the production of e-liquid in a variety of forms, has grown rapidly. In its Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report dated September 18, 2020, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported that electronic smoking devices have been the most commonly used tobacco product among United States youths since 2014. The United States Surgeon General first issued a warning in 2016 stating that use of electronic smoking devices among the nation's youth and young adults had become a major public health concern. In 2018, the Surgeon General classified the danger of youth use of electronic smoking devices as an epidemic.
5656
5757 According to a report titled "E-Cigarette Use Among Youth and Young Adults", the United States Surgeon General explained that ninety-five per cent of all smokers start smoking before the age of twenty-one. As there has been an overall decline in the use of combustible cigarettes over the last decade, there has been a dramatic increase in the use of electronic smoking devices by Hawaii's youth. The rise in use of electronic smoking devices among Hawaii youth is higher than the national average. Between 2011 to 2015, the proportion of youth experimenting with electronic smoking devices increased six-fold among middle school youth and four-fold among high school youth. In 2017, twenty-seven per cent of public middle school students and forty-two per cent of public high school students tried electronic smoking devices. By 2019, thirty-one percent of public middle school students and forty-eight percent of public high school students had used an electronic smoking device. In 2020, eight in ten youth who currently use e-cigarettes reported using a flavored product. These rates are higher than the national average, demonstrate an alarming increase in Hawaii youth nicotine use, and serve to illustrate a bleak future of nicotine addiction in the next generation.
5858
5959 Toxicologists have warned that e-liquids pose significant risks to public health, particularly to children. The 2016 Surgeon General's Report further states that if the contents of prefilled cartridges or bottles of e-liquids containing nicotine are ingested, they may cause acute toxicity and possibly death.
6060
6161 According to CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report dated September 18, 2020, from November of 2016 to August of 2019, total electronic smoking device unit sales in the United States increased nearly three hundred per cent. Continued monitoring of electronic smoking device sales and use is critical to inform strategies to minimize risk among Hawaii's most vulnerable populations, including youth users.
6262
6363 The 2016 Surgeon General's Report found that there are numerous policies and practices that can be implemented at state and local levels to address electronic smoking device use among youth and young adults, including preventing access to electronic smoking devices by youth, increasing taxes imposed upon electronic smoking devices, increasing prices of retail licensure, and regulating electronic smoking device marketing.
6464
6565 Additionally, the rapid growth of the electronic smoking device industry, including retail businesses selling electronic smoking devices or e-liquid, necessitates further regulations to protect consumers, such as requiring retailers of e-liquid to obtain a retail tobacco permit. The 2016 Surgeon General's Report found that children and youth are especially vulnerable to the targeted online social and digital media marketing of inexpensive electronic smoking devices offered in enticing concealable forms and e-liquids in various flavors.
6666
6767 The United States Food and Drug Administration has expanded its regulatory authority to all tobacco products, including electronic smoking devices, cigars, and hookah and pipe tobacco. While there is federal consensus that electronic smoking devices are tobacco products, Hawaii has no state tobacco tax imposed on electronic smoking devices and e-liquids. While the use of electronic smoking devices and e-liquids also carry the risk of adverse health consequences, these products are currently taxed at a much lower rate than cigarettes. Decades of research have shown that increasing cigarette prices, such as through the imposition of cigarette taxes, can reduce the rate of smoking by adult and youth smokers. As outlined in the 2016 Surgeon General's Report, current findings show this public health policy can likewise be applied to electronic smoking devices and e-liquids to reduce youth consumption.
6868
6969 Taxing e-liquids and electronic smoking devices as tobacco products will provide pricing parity between products on the market, which will result in consumer clarity and positive health benefits, including encouraging young, price-conscious consumers to quit smoking or sustain cessation, preventing youth initiation, and reducing consumption among those who continue to use them.
7070
7171 The purpose of this Act is to:
7272
7373 (1) Establish the criminal offense of unlawful shipment of tobacco products;
7474
7575 (2) Amend the definition of "tobacco products" as used in the State's cigarette tax and tobacco tax law to include e-liquid and electronic smoking devices, thereby:
7676
7777 (A) Subjecting e-liquids and electronic smoking devices to the excise tax on tobacco products;
7878
7979 (B) Requiring retailers of e-liquids or electronic smoking devices to obtain a retail tobacco permit to sell, possess, keep, acquire, distribute, or transport e-liquids or electronic smoking devices;
8080
8181 (C) Prohibiting persons from engaging in the business of a wholesaler or dealer of e-liquids or electronic smoking devices without first obtaining a license from the department of taxation; and
8282
8383 (D) Applying other requirements of the cigarette tax and tobacco tax law to e-liquids and electronic smoking devices;
8484
8585 (3) Increase the license fee for persons engaged as wholesalers or dealers of cigarettes and tobacco products;
8686
8787 (4) Increase the retail tobacco permit fee for retailers engaged in the retail sale of cigarettes and tobacco products; and
8888
8989 (5) Repeal various statutory provisions relating to electronic smoking devices to avoid conflict with taxation and regulation under the cigarette tax and tobacco tax law.
9090
9191 SECTION 2. Chapter 245, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
9292
9393 "§245- Unlawful shipment of tobacco products; penalty; liability for unpaid taxes. (a) A person or entity commits the offense of unlawful shipment of tobacco products if the person or entity:
9494
9595 (1) Is engaged in the business of selling tobacco products; and
9696
9797 (2) Ships or causes to be shipped any tobacco products to a person or entity in this State that is not a licensee under this chapter.
9898
9999 (b) This section shall not apply to the shipment of tobacco products if any of the following conditions are met:
100100
101101 (1) The tobacco products are exempt from taxes as provided by section 245-3(b); or
102102
103103 (2) All applicable State taxes on the tobacco products are paid in accordance with the requirements of this chapter.
104104
105105 (c) Unlawful shipment of tobacco products is a class C felony if the person or entity knowingly ships or causes to be shipped tobacco products with a value of $10,000 or more in violation of subsection (a).
106106
107107 (d) Unlawful shipment of tobacco products is a misdemeanor if the person or entity knowingly ships or causes to be shipped tobacco products with a value of less than $10,000 in violation of subsection (a).
108108
109109 (e) For purposes of this section, a person or entity is a licensee if the person's or entity's name appears on a list of authorized licensees published by the department.
110110
111111 (f) Notwithstanding the existence of other remedies at law, any person or entity that purchases, uses, controls, or possesses any tobacco products for which the applicable taxes imposed under title 14 have not been paid, shall be liable for the applicable taxes, plus any penalty and interest as provided for by law.
112112
113113 (g) For the purpose of this section, "value" means the retail fair market value at the time of the offense."
114114
115115 SECTION 3. Section 245-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows:
116116
117117 1. By adding two new definitions to be appropriately inserted and to read:
118118
119119 ""Electronic smoking device" means any device that may be used to deliver any aerosolized or vaporized substance to the person inhaling from the device, including but not limited to an electronic-cigarette, electronic-cigar, electronic-pipe, vape pen, or electronic-hookah. "Electronic smoking device" includes any component, part, or accessory of the device, and any substance that may be aerosolized or vaporized by the device, whether or not the substance contains nicotine. "Electronic smoking device" does not include drugs, devices, or combination products authorized for sale by the United States Food and Drug Administration, as those terms are defined in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act.
120120
121121 "E-liquid" means any liquid or like substance, which may or may not contain nicotine, that is designed or intended to be used in an electronic smoking device, whether or not packaged in a cartridge or other container. "E-liquid" does not include prescription drugs; cannabis for medical use governed by chapter 329; manufactured cannabis products governed by chapter 329D; or medical devices used to aerosolize, inhale, or ingest prescription drugs, including manufactured cannabis products manufactured or distributed in accordance with section 329D‑10(a)."
122122
123123 2. By amending the definition of "tobacco products" to read:
124124
125125 ""Tobacco products" means [tobacco in any form,]:
126126
127127 (1) Any product containing, made of, or derived from tobacco or nicotine, other than cigarettes or little cigars, that is [prepared or] intended for human consumption [or for personal use by humans,] or is likely to be consumed by inhalation, absorption, or any other means of ingestion, including large cigars and any substitutes thereof other than cigarettes that bear the semblance thereof, snuff, snus, chewing or smokeless tobacco, and smoking or pipe tobacco[.];
128128
129129 (2) Any electronic smoking device as defined in this section and any substance, including e-liquids, that may be aerosolized or vaporized by the device, whether or not the substance contains nicotine; or
130130
131131 (3) Any component, part, or accessory of any item described in paragraph (1) or (2), whether or not any of these contains tobacco or nicotine, including but not limited to filters, rolling papers, blunt or hemp wraps, hookahs, and pipes.
132132
133133 "Tobacco products" does not mean drugs, devices, or combination products authorized for sale by the United States Food and Drug Administration, as those terms are defined in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act."
134134
135135 SECTION 4. Section 245-2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:
136136
137137 "(b) The license shall be issued by the department upon application therefor, in such form and manner as shall be required by rule of the department, and the payment of a fee of [$2.50,] $250, and shall be renewable annually on July 1 for the twelve months ending the succeeding June 30."
138138
139139 SECTION 5. Section 245-2.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsections (c) and (d) to read as follows:
140140
141141 "(c) The retail tobacco permit shall be issued by the department upon application by the retailer in the form and manner prescribed by the department, and the payment of a fee of [$20.] $50. Permits shall be valid for one year, from December 1 to November 30, and renewable annually. Whenever a retail tobacco permit is defaced, destroyed, or lost, or the permittee relocates the permittee's business, the department may issue a duplicate retail tobacco permit to the permittee for a fee of $5 per copy.
142142
143143 (d) A separate retail tobacco permit shall be obtained for each place of business owned, controlled, or operated by a retailer. In seeking a retail tobacco permit, the applicant shall specify whether each place of business sells e-liquid, electronic smoking devices, or both. A retailer that owns or controls more than one place of business may submit a single application for more than one retail tobacco permit. Each retail tobacco permit issued shall clearly describe the place of business where the operation of the business is conducted[.] and whether the place of business sells e-liquid, electronic smoking devices, or both."
144144
145145 SECTION 6. Chapter 28, part XII, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.
146146
147147 SECTION 7. Section 245-17, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.
148148
149149 ["[§245-17] Delivery sales. (a) No person shall conduct a delivery sale or otherwise ship or transport, or cause to be shipped or transported, any electronic smoking device in connection with a delivery sale to any person under the age of twenty-one.
150150
151151 (b) A person who makes delivery sales shall not accept a purchase or order from any person without first obtaining the full name, birth date, and address of that person and verifying the purchaser's age by:
152152
153153 (1) An independently operated third-party database or aggregate of databases that are regularly used by government and businesses for the purpose of age and identity verification and authentication;
154154
155155 (2) Receiving a copy of a government issued identification card from the purchaser; or
156156
157157 (3) Requiring age and signature verification in the shipment process and upon and before actual delivery.
158158
159159 (c) The purchaser shall certify their age before completing the purchaser's order.
160160
161161 (d) Any person who violates this section shall be fined $500 for the first offense. Any subsequent offenses shall subject the person to a fine of no less than $500 but no more than $2,000. Any person under twenty-one years of age who violates this section shall be fined $10 for the first offense; provided that any subsequent offense shall subject the person to a fine of $50, no part of which shall be suspended, or the person shall be required to perform no less than forty-eight hours but no more than seventy-two hours of community service during hours when the person is not employed or attending school.
162162
163163 (e) The department shall not adopt rules prohibiting delivery sales.
164164
165165 (f) For the purposes of this section:
166166
167167 "Delivery sale" means any sale of an electronic smoking device to a purchaser in the State where either:
168168
169169 (1) The purchaser submits the order for sale by means of a telephonic or other method of voice transmission, the mail or any other delivery service, or the internet or other online service; or
170170
171171 (2) The electronic smoking device is delivered by use of the mail or any other delivery service.
172172
173173 The foregoing sales of electronic smoking devices shall constitute a delivery sale regardless of whether the seller is located within or without the State.
174174
175175 "Electronic smoking device" means any electronic product that can be used to aerosolize and deliver nicotine or other substances to the person inhaling from the device, including but not limited to an electronic cigarette, electronic cigar, electronic cigarillo, or electronic pipe, and any cartridge or other component of the device or related product."]
176176
177177 SECTION 8. Section 328J-11.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.
178178
179179 ["[§328J-11.5] Statewide concern. (a) Sales of cigarettes, tobacco products, and electronic smoking devices are a statewide concern. It is the intent of the legislature to regulate the sale of cigarettes, tobacco products, and electronic smoking devices in a uniform and exclusive manner.
180180
181181 (b) All local ordinances or regulations that regulate the sale of cigarettes, tobacco products, and electronic smoking devices are preempted, and existing local laws and regulations conflicting with this chapter are null and void.
182182
183183 (c) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to limit a county's authority under section 328J-15."]
184184
185185 SECTION 9. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date.
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187187 SECTION 10. If any provision of this Act, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance, is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of the Act that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this Act are severable.
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189189 SECTION 11. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
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191191 SECTION 12. This Act shall take effect on January 1, 2024.
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195195 INTRODUCED BY: _____________________________
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197197 INTRODUCED BY:
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199199 _____________________________
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225225 Report Title: Tobacco Products; E-Liquid; Electronic Smoking Devices; Unlawful Shipment; License Fee; Retail Permit Fee Description: Establishes the criminal offense of unlawful shipment of tobacco products. Amends the definition of "tobacco products" under the Cigarette Tax and Tobacco Tax Law to include electronic smoking devices and e-liquids. Increases the license fee for persons engaged as wholesalers or dealers of cigarettes and tobacco products and the retail tobacco permit fee for retailers engaged in the retail sale of cigarettes and tobacco products. Repeals state laws that establish and govern the Electronic Smoking Device Retailer Registration Unit within the Department of the Attorney General; provisions of the Cigarette Tax and Tobacco Tax Law that govern delivery sales; and state law governing smoking that preempts and voids local ordinances and regulations conflicting with state law. Effective January 1, 2024. The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
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233233 Tobacco Products; E-Liquid; Electronic Smoking Devices; Unlawful Shipment; License Fee; Retail Permit Fee
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239239 Establishes the criminal offense of unlawful shipment of tobacco products. Amends the definition of "tobacco products" under the Cigarette Tax and Tobacco Tax Law to include electronic smoking devices and e-liquids. Increases the license fee for persons engaged as wholesalers or dealers of cigarettes and tobacco products and the retail tobacco permit fee for retailers engaged in the retail sale of cigarettes and tobacco products. Repeals state laws that establish and govern the Electronic Smoking Device Retailer Registration Unit within the Department of the Attorney General; provisions of the Cigarette Tax and Tobacco Tax Law that govern delivery sales; and state law governing smoking that preempts and voids local ordinances and regulations conflicting with state law. Effective January 1, 2024.
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247247 The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.