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June 22, 2010 10:53 AM

New Law Nixes Tobacco Shipments by Mail

(CBS/AP)  Savvy smokers and other tobacco users have long known a secret to getting their tobacco on the cheap: buy through the mail. Ordering from tobacco-producing southern states with plenty of supply and low taxes - or from tax-free Indian reservations - offered a steep discount to store prices.

But no more. A law taking effect June 29 will ban most tobacco products from being delivered by the U.S. Postal Service, closing a loophole that the government considered a tax dodge and a way for young people to skirt age restrictions.

The law, Prevent All Cigarette Trafficking Act was signed into law March 31, part of a growing regulatory crackdown on tobacco under President Barack Obama that has included bans on flavored cigarettes (except for menthols) and on cigarettes labeled as "light," as well as a broader Food and Drug Administration review that is expected to last years, but may result in sweeping new rules.

The mailing ban will extend to cigarettes, roll-your-own tobacco and smokeless tobacco. It does not include cigars.

There are a few exceptions. Shipments entirely within Alaska and Hawaii can continue. So can packages sent between tobacco businesses.

The "light" cigarettes rule also takes effect this month. The FDA ruled that cigarette packs can no longer feature names such as "light," "mild," "medium" or "low," which many smokers wrongly think are less harmful than "full-flavor" cigarettes.

Cigarette makers are replacing those words with colors such as gold, silver, blue and orange on brands that make up more than half of the smokes sold across the country.

Studies show that about 90 percent of smokers and nonsmokers believe that cigarettes described as "light" or have certain colors on the packages are less harmful even though "all commercial cigarettes are equally lethal," said David Hammond, a health behavior researcher at the University of Waterloo in Canada.

Still, a year after a new law put tobacco regulation in the hands of the FDA, one thing is clear: It will likely be years before any of the most aggressive steps to reduce deaths from smoking might happen.

When President Barack Obama signed the bill into law last June, anti-tobacco advocates suggested it could lead to a reduction in nicotine levels, a ban on menthol cigarettes or other aggressive moves.

Such moves are still a long way down the road as the FDA takes its time assessing the scientific evidence for what would best improve public health. That leaves the future of the industry and effects on both companies and consumers under a cloud of smoke.

But for public health experts, one thing is clear - more needs to be done to snuff out the death and disease caused by cigarettes and other tobacco products, and stop people from using them in the first place.

In a short period, the FDA has made real progress that will begin to have a meaningful health impact, said Matthew Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids.

While the law doesn't let the FDA ban nicotine or tobacco outright, the agency could lower nicotine to non-addictive levels. And that's exactly what former FDA Commissioner David Kessler, who championed the anti-tobacco public health movement, wants to see happen.

"The tobacco industry knew 40 years ago that there was a threshold below which people would quit," Kessler said in an interview with The Associated Press. "Reducing the level of nicotine in cigarettes will change cigarette smoking as we know it. It is the ultimate harm reduction strategy."

Most smokers ingest between 1 to 3 milligrams of nicotine per cigarette. Kessler suggests that the FDA lower that number to between 1 and .5 milligrams.

While some will argue such a proposal is akin to prohibition, making cigarettes less addictive would reduce the vast majority of the more than 400,000 deaths per year from smoking in the U.S., Kessler said.

"It is now time to reverse the trajectory of smoking initiation, sustained addiction and premature death," he said. "Ultimately the agency's success needs to be measured in terms of the number of people who smoke and the number of kids who start."

Kessler's suggestion to make tobacco less addictive deserves "serious consideration," said the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids' Myers.

There are two approaches to regulating tobacco use: one that says there's no safe way to use tobacco and pushes for people to quit above all else. Others embrace the idea that lower-risk alternatives like smokeless tobacco and other nicotine delivery systems like gum or even electronic cigarettes can help improve overall health.

The law lays out the possibility for both, prescribing a scientific approach to improve public health, said Dr. Lawrence Deyton, director of the FDA's Center for Tobacco Products.

"There's multiple strategies the FDA will be considering," Deyton said in an interview with The Associated Press. "We certainly have not made any determination on one side or another."

Deyton did not say whether Kessler's suggestion would become a reality, but said the law does allow the FDA to set nicotine levels.

No matter the approach, Deyton said he wants Americans to trust what the agency's work on tobacco.

"We now get the opportunity to speak the truth about tobacco products and do so in a reasonable way," Deyton said. "We will not do it as zealots, we will not do it as aggressive government. We will do it in a methodical, reasonable way."

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 24 Comments
by Histonia February 10, 2012 2:33 AM EST
Smoking does cause harm to the body. Research shows that excess stress and other factors do as well. The best way for people to quit smoking is not to tell them to quit smoking; but to show them ways to reduce the reasons they smoke. Everyone doesn't have time for a yoga class; but there are ways to reduce this. I'm not against smoking at all. Just excessive smoking. But here's THE THING:

It is none of the government's or anyone else's business if you do or don't smoke. If you're shoving a cigarette into someone else's mouth or breaking your smoke into their mouth, tell them to suck it. It's your body. Not theirs. The government has ABSOLUTELY NO constitutional right to make people quit or to reduce the amount of nicotine in cigarettes unless the amount kills people in a swift amount of time.... as in: before they can get to the hospital. Smokers know what they sign up for. Don't let government make your choices for you. If you want to quit, quit. If you don't, don't. This law is one more way for lobbyists and career politicians to stick their hand in your wallet and their nose in your business.
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by Histonia February 10, 2012 2:36 AM EST
Sorry for the typos. Passionate rant... Corrections: "The best way for you to get people to quit smoking" // "If you're NOT shoving a cigarette into someone else's mouth" / "or BREATHING your smoke"
by angrysoldier315 July 15, 2010 3:18 AM EDT
im deployed in afghanistan and we r at this lil base and cant go get tobacco products whenever we want to and now they take the rite for people to send us tobacco products through the mail this is bull **** we r over here fighting for our country and cant even have tobacco sent to us this is a major moral decreaser!!!!!!!!!!!
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by msquacks July 1, 2010 7:42 PM EDT
I AM SHIPPING MY SAILOR CIGARS TOMORROW!!

And I am bringing this dang article to that snotty clerk and showing her the fine print!!

~~~~~~It does not include cigars.~~~~~~~~~~
Reply to this comment
by msquacks July 1, 2010 6:46 PM EDT
This law is garbage. Let me first add I have not smoked for over 7 years BY MY CHOICE! I do NOT harbor ill feelings toward anyone who smokes.
Here is where the law Really sucks!
My son who is deployed has asked me for nothing OTHER THAN Cig's and coffee to be sent to him. They do NOT have the luxury as we do of getting in our car driving down the road, walking into a store and getting what we need.

This is law is so wrong. Let Obama go without cigs as long as my son will have to now! I am sure he would be changing his tune in one day!

Here is another one for your books! I went to ship my son cig's and coffee last week on June 23rd, They clerk raised her voice "I CANT SHIP THOSE!" I questioned her why and she informed me the law and EVEN made a phone call to confirm that she couldnt mail them. So I brought them home!

Then I read the law DIDNT GO INTO EFFECT UNTIL JUNE 29th!!! If they stupid morons are going to enforce the law then they need to know what the frigging LAWS ARE!!
Yes I am made and WILL be calling my congressman and senators! And I will be returning to the post office with the printed law and turning that clerk into her supervisior and making a complaint with the US Postal service!!
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by rockcutr June 29, 2010 10:33 AM EDT
Citizens need to gather together to tax the government. It is past time for citizens to recieve what the government promises and does not provide. Like security from the Mexican invasion. Protection from egocentric oil companies. A new car that doesn't cost more than a house. Then my favorite pet peeve, force health insurance to be total insurance by not seperating dental and eye care from the basic package. On the bad news for the Seneca Nations, if they stay open, there is likely to be a whole bunch of trips made to Irving, New York or where ever they may set up shop. The underground cig market isn't what it used to be. Friends of mine years ago from Boston, used to run to the Carolinas in pickup trucks...get cases for 30 cents a pack and then sell them at a street discount of $1 per pack back when cigs were $1.75. Silly wabbits......there is always a way around these stupid regulations. People did not go sober during the booze ban. Just because pot is illegal doesn't seem to stop folks from using that either.
Effectively what the government just did was wage a war upon the Seneca Nations. Could have just as well delivered blankets with small pox. The government just killed 3000 natives. If you were gwbush, that is more than enough to send the entire us military force half way around the world to kill millions, steal their oil and rape their women. They make it harder and harder to be a proud american every day. The saving grace in this is, the ones that make these laws and decisions have lost their souls in seeking power over citizens. They have no GOD in their hearts. "Vengance is mine saith the Lord".
Good luck with that.
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by bushmaster27 June 25, 2010 2:45 PM EDT
Well afmcalax, what about the soldiers in afghanistan and Iraq that can't buy tobacco products b/c the exchange never has any, and when they do they are of small numbers b/c they are highjacked by taliban or scum the like (Bad men)and then the soldiers have nothing. I will get to my full point in a second. So the place where we are suppose to buy our tobacco which has not been taxed is not available. So soldiers that have picked up the nasty habit due to things like fire fights and IED's are the ones being put in a pinch due to the fact that the people that support them can no longer send them the things, usually the only things they want from home, that keep them calm. Now here is my point. Soldiers cannot get it from the exchange and they cannot get it from home through the mail so where do they get it? The local guy next to the FOB. The guy who has everything all the time. He gets everything he has from the (Bad men) he deals with b/c soldiers want the things he can get. Now who do the Bad men work for? You are so smart, that's right THE TALIBAN!!!!! So now soldiers are paying the local guy for tobacco that should be sold at the exchange but is being sold by the local guy who in turn has to either pay the TALIBAN for the products or if he gets these things from someone else; has to pay the TALIBAN a cut of what he sells so they won't kill his family! The Government is so disconnected when it comes to these things it is rediculous. So what do the Soldiers do! They buy what they can get b/c they enjoy the little things in life like tobacco. We do not buy it over the internet unless it is cigars. Our families buy it at the Commissary or the gas station which is taxed. So.......
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by kimree June 23, 2010 11:54 PM EDT
Wa, Is e-cigarette yet banned?? If I get a e-cigarette from Kimree through the mail, whether it will be banned?
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by tgbman June 22, 2010 4:06 PM EDT
I think we all know it's just an excuse to add more taxes.
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by DeesSoapBox June 22, 2010 1:15 PM EDT
There's always UPS...
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by FromPhoenix June 22, 2010 3:58 PM EDT
Nope. UPS, Fed-Ex and even DSL opted out a long time ago (as a reaction to Federal sanctions0> USPO was the only game in town and now that's 'kapute.' This action has virtually destroyed the econmic climate of the Seneca Tribe even though, in campaign speeches, the President assured the Senecas that 'he was on their side and would protect their interests.' To the non-smokers who are applauding this money grab, just wait till your ox is gored.
by msquacks July 1, 2010 6:49 PM EDT
UPS and FEDEX are under this law also and will not ship either
by barbaram99 June 22, 2010 1:13 PM EDT
I have always thought mailing smoking items and cegerettes were/are illgel..I always been told that years ago..I am 55..
Reply to this comment
by msquacks July 1, 2010 6:52 PM EDT
No it was not illegal to ship a certain amount. When I worked for a cig store on the Idaho/Washington border Washington state was stopping buyers coming from Idaho and searching and ticketing, they were losing cig tax. They were only allowed a certain amount of smokes across the state line. But you were always allowed to mail, I mailed to the military service people back in 1980's
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