Tag: Nevada

  • PMI Lobbies Nevada Lawmakers for Lower IQOS Tax

    PMI Lobbies Nevada Lawmakers for Lower IQOS Tax

    Credit: Aidman

    Representatives from Philip Morris International (PMI) have begun pitching the benefits of its IQOS heated tobacco device to Nevada state lawmakers. The cigarette maker hopes Silver State legislators will pass a bill next year to tax heated tobacco at a lower rate than traditional cigarettes.

    PMI is preparing to launch IQOS in the United States. As part of those efforts, PMI has hired lobbyists in multiple states, including Nevada, according to media reports. The company has postponed the test launch of IQOS in the U.S. to the fourth quarter. The company declined to say why. The pilot was earlier scheduled to run in Austin, Texas, in the second quarter.

    Anti-tobacco activists have been seeking to derail the U.S. introduction of IQOS, arguing among other things that PMI exaggerates the number of people who have quit smoking regulator cigarettes using IQOS.

    PMI director of Scientific Engagement Brian Erkkila explained how IQOS works in a presentation on Tuesday to Nevada’s Joint Interim Standing Committee on Revenue. While no specific legislative asks were made Tuesday, Eddie Ableser of Tri-Strategies — the Nevada-based government affairs firm working with PMI — told lawmakers the company is looking to start a conversation about how the product should be taxed.

    “The intent is not a complete absolution of harm,” he told the lawmakers. “It’s harm reduction. How do we move and target the current cigarette smokers in Nevada? How can we move them onto a harm reduction product that helps them?”

    He added, “We develop tax policy generally to motivate consumers one way or the other.”

    Nevada tax policy does not consider heated tobacco products such as IQOS as other tobacco products (OTPs), which includes vaping devices, and they are taxed at 30 percent of the wholesale price. However, most tax codes generally consider heated tobacco products to be traditional cigarettes.

    In Nevada, cigarettes are taxed the equivalent of $1.80 per pack. According to the anti-nicotine nonprofit Truth Initiative, Nevada is in the middle of the pack (25th highest) when it comes to tax rates for cigarettes.

    According to the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting ProjectPMI has successfully lobbied at least 10 countries to tax heated tobacco products at a lower rate than traditional cigarettes, using the argument that the product is far less harmful and less worthy of any kind of  “sin tax.”

    PMI launched IQOS in Japan a decade ago and has since expanded into dozens of other countries. According to Alexandra Wich, a senior manager of state regulatory and public policy at PMI, intellectual property litigation has kept the product out of the U.S. market, but those issues have been resolved.

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration gave PMI permission to market their products as reducing exposure to the harmful chemicals produced by combustible cigarettes, concluding that “the net population-level benefits to adult smokers outweigh the risks to youth.”

  • Nevada Sheriff Wants Vapor Age Compliance Checks

    Nevada Sheriff Wants Vapor Age Compliance Checks

    After conducting its year-end alcohol compliance check last week, Carson City Sheriff Ken Furlong said his office is requesting that the Nevada Attorney General’s Office include vaping and other tobacco products that businesses shouldn’t be selling to minors in future stings.

    The CCSO’s school resource officers, in conjunction with Partnership Carson City, held their final sting on Dec. 28 to ensure local businesses aren’t selling alcoholic beverage products to minors.

    The compliance check was held with the support of three volunteers aged 16 to 18 who were sent to screen eight local businesses. Only one failed.

    Furlong told the Nevada Appeal his request for expansion is to acquire greater resources to keep vaping and tobacco products from being easily accessible to teens in storefronts.

    “I have instructed our team to proceed and coordinate with the AG’s office and determine if we can likewise add vaping and tobacco with the alcohol,” Furlong said. “(The businesses) would get a citation.”

    Furlong said he hoped to hear soon from the Attorney General’s Office on the compliance checks, which are conducted every six to eight weeks.

  • New Bill Proposes Combustible ‘Endgame’ in Nevada

    New Bill Proposes Combustible ‘Endgame’ in Nevada

    Credit: Peter Zayda

    A new bill in the U.S. state of Nevada seeks to end all combustible cigarette sales in the state by 2030 and would also include flavored e-cigarettes.

    The bill would ban all e-cigarettes that are flavored to taste like something other than tobacco, but spares most other non-combustible tobacco products.

    Assemblyman David Orentlicher has introduced A.B. 294, which would make several changes to how combustible tobacco products other than premium cigars are sold in the state, essentially outlawing their sale by 2030, reports Charlie Minato of Halfwheel.

    Among other things, the bill would bar the Nevada Department of Taxation from issuing any license to any vending machine operator, manufacturer or wholesale dealer of combustible cigarette products on or after Jan. 1, 2029.

    The licenses are only valid in the calendar year they are issued, meaning there would be no licensed wholesale dealers beginning on Jan. 1, 2030.

    It would also make it illegal to sell combustible tobacco products to anyone born on or after Dec. 31, 2002.