Petition updateVote No on the Denver flavor vape banNext Steps for Fighting Proposed Colorado Vaping Flavor Ban
Daniel MaldonadoDenver, CO, United States
Jan 26, 2022

We have quite a few action items to defeat or amend House Bill 1064, the statewide, vaping flavor ban bill.  Please see below for ways you can act now.  Call us with any questions.

 

1.  Please call and email the Colorado State Representatives listed below.  For now, we will start with the State Representatives who serve on the Health and Insurance committee.  Later, we will broaden our list of Representatives to contact.  The phone numbers and email addresses for the 12 members of the Health and Insurance committee members are listed below.   Use the messaging and talking points listed below.  Of course, personalize the messaging to reflect your way of communicating.  

 

2.  Ask your store employees and your customers to also contact the Colorado State Representatives listed below.   Use the messaging and talking points listed below.  Ask the store employees and customers to personalize the messaging. 

 

3. Ask your store employees and customers to sign the www.Change.org petition at:  https://chng.it/DKKhgSZsrG   

 

4.  HB 1064 has not yet been assigned a date on the calendar for debate and discussion.  Once a date has been assigned, we will notify you.  We will also confirm if virtual testimony, such as Zoom, will be allowed.  

 

5.  We will work on amendments for you to support, such as the Age Restricted Amendment, which would only allow flavored vaping products to be sold in age restricted stores like yours.

 

6. Media outreach. If you would like to be interviewed by local or state media, please contact Joe Miklosi at jpm@joemiklosi.com or 303-919-4748.  We will coach you to speak to the media.  As store owners and leaders in the vaping community, you are the best spokespersons.  

 

7.  Thank you for your recent donations to help hire an Organizer to grow RMSFA membership.  If you have not yet donated, please visit www.RMSFA.org to donate.

 

8.  Please contact us if you have medical professionals who can testify in committee in support of our viewpoints.  

 

9.  Below are messaging talking points that you can use when calling and emailing the Colorado State Representatives and State Senators.

 

Dear Representative Last Name:

 

Thank you for your service to the people of Colorado. I am contacting you today about HB 1064, the statewide, vaping flavor ban legislation.  

 

I would like to schedule a time to speak with you in-person or by Zoom or phone to discuss the most effective public policy solutions that both reduce youth vaping while still allowing responsible adults to use flavored vaping products to quit smoking more harmful cigarettes.  

 

I am a small business owner in the State of Colorado. I will go out of business and be forced to fire my employees if this legislation is not amended.  Please consider amending HB 1064 to include an Age Restricted Amendment.   

 

Approximately 96% of my sales are flavored vaping products.  I do not sell non-vaping products like the approximate 4,000 convenience stores in Colorado.  If you remove 96% of sales from any business, the business will cease to exist. 

 

There are many differences between responsible small vaping stores and JUUL.  For example, small vaping stores do not sell JUUL products.  Small vaping stores sell 50% less nicotine than JUUL products.  Small vaping store vaping products are four times more expensive and four times larger so they cannot be concealed.  If you examine confiscated vaping products from any School Resource Officer, the products will be small, discrete, easy-to-conceal JUUL products.  Not large, open-tank, vaping products sold in my stores.   JUUL's actions have tarnished the approximate 150 responsible, small vaping stores in Colorado who empower adults to quit smoking more harmful cigarettes. 

 

Small vaping stores should be treated similar to marijuana shops.  We want to be highly regulated to prevent youth from being able to purchase our products.  We support public policy best practices to reduce youth vaping.  These public policies include: additional licenses, increased inspections, and stiff fines for any store that sells to a minor.  We also support marketing restrictions, requiring ID scanners and track and trace products, and only allowing 21-year-old consumers or older to enter an age restricted store to purchase flavor vaping products.

 

It is important to note that one, single cigarette contains 7,000 chemicals – at least 93 of which are proven carcinogens.  A typical vaping device only contains approximately 12 major ingredients.  Vaping products do not contain charcoal or tar – the two main ingredients that kill approximately 480,000 Americans annually.  That is why 14, highly respected, domestic and international health care organizations have publicly commented about vaping being a safer alternative than smoking combustible cigarettes.  

 

During the last four years, approximately 4% of stores in Colorado have been fined for selling to minors.  These stores are predominantly convenience stores - not age restricted vaping stores. 

 

Next, please consider the negative economic impact of a vaping flavor ban.  Overall, the State of Colorado will annually lose between $75 - $100 million dollars of direct taxes and an additional $75 million dollars of annual indirect economic impact.  Below is a list of economic contributions of a typical small vaping store:

 

Employs four to 10 full time employees.
Over 95% of store owners lease their space. Lease contributes to property taxes for the municipality.  
Each small, independent vaping store conducts approximately 10,000 – 16,000 transactions annually.
Each small, independent store contributes between $50,000 to $80,000 in annual sales tax and pays approximately $80,000 in annual employer and employee payroll taxes.  Small vaping stores also pay other employee taxes, such as FICA.
 

Next, it is important to note that youth vaping has reduced nearly 30% each year during the last three years according to the CDC and FDA National Youth Tobacco Survey (NYTS).   

 

For example, in 2020, the National Youth Tobacco Survey reported that there were 2.8 million fewer American youth who used vaping products than in 2019.  

 

The federal government, the State of Colorado, and dozens of Colorado municipalities have passed over 12 common sense laws and regulations (not flavor bans) to reduce youth vaping.  The laws are working. 

 

For example, voters of the State of Colorado increased taxes 62% to reduce youth vaping. The State of Colorado created a state licensing and enforcement system for stores to prevent minors from purchasing vaping products.  The State of Colorado increased the number of inspections at stores. The State of Colorado raised the age to 21 to purchase vaping products at the federal and state level. The State of Colorado banned new retail vaping stores from existing within 500 feet of schools.  The State of Colorado restricted advertising for vaping products.  The federal government prohibited flavors in closed, discreet vaping devices.  

 

Flavor bans do not work.  Flavor bans make the problem worse.  Please consider these negative impacts of a flavor ban:

 

Flavor bans shutdown responsible small businesses and allow JUUL to dominate the market with high nicotine products.  My stores sell half the amount of nicotine as JUUL products.  Flavor bans do not solve the youth vaping issue. The CDC & FDA National Youth Tobacco annual surveys conclude that curiosity, peer pressure, and high nicotine motivated youth use - not flavors. 

 

Additionally, flavor bans will motivate consumers will travel across state boundaries to purchase flavored vaping products.  An underground market will be created and products will not follow strict manufacturing standards.  Consumers will return to more harmful cigarettes. Flavor bans disproportionately target historically disadvantaged populations (ACLU, Drug Policy Alliance). 

 

A 2017 Yale University study concluded that “a ban on flavored e-cigarettes would drive smokers to combustible cigarettes, which have been found to be the more harmful way of getting nicotine.” 

 

San Francisco approved a 2018 ban of the sale of flavored tobacco products — including menthol cigarettes and flavored vape liquids. According to a May, 2021 study from the Yale School of Public Health (YSPH), that law had the opposite effect.  Analyses found that, after the ban’s implementation, high school students’ odds of smoking conventional cigarettes doubled in San Francisco’s school district relative to trends in districts without the ban, even when adjusting for individual demographics and other tobacco policies.

Finally, please keep in mind that when the 2009 Tobacco Control Act was signed into law by President Obama, the FDA only envisioned regulating five or six, international tobacco companies - not regulating thousands of independent, small, vaping stores.  Small vaping stores were created in 2009 by thousands of adults who unsuccessfully tried quitting smoking from the nicotine patch, the nicotine gum, pharmaceutical drugs, and similar products.  For 4.6 million adults in the United States, flavored vaping products are the best option to quit smoking deadly cigarettes.  

 

I look forward to visiting with you to implement the most common sense, effective, vaping public policies that both reduce youth vaping and allow adults to use flavored vaping products to stay alive and to quit smoking cigarettes.

 

Please call me on my cell to ask any questions. 

 

Thank you!

 

Your Name

Title

Cell Phone

 

10. Below are the phone numbers and email addresses of the Colorado State Representatives who serve on the Health and Insurance committee. We also included the two State Senate sponsors.  

Colorado State Representative

David Ortiz 

303-886-2953

David.Ortiz.house@state.co.us

Colorado State Representative

Brianna Titone

303-866-2962

brianna.titone.house@state.co.us

Colorado State Representative

Kyle Mullica

303-866-2931

kyle.mullica.house@state.co.us

Colorado State Representative

Jennifer Bacon

303-866-2909

jennifer.bacon.house@state.co.us

Colorado State Representative

Susan Lontine

303-866-2966

susan.lontine.house@state.co.us

Colorado State Representative

Mark Baisley

303-866-2935

mark.baisley.house@state.co.us

Colorado State Representative

Chris Kennedy

303-866-2951

chris.kennedy.house@state.co.us

Colorado State Representative

Karen McCormick

303-866-2780

karen.mccormick.house@state.co.us

Colorado State Representative

Patrick Neville

303-866-2948

patrick.neville.house@state.co.us

Colorado State Representative

Emily Sirota

303-866-2910

emily.sirota.house@state.co.us

Colorado State Representative

Matt Soper

303-866-2583

matt.soper.house@state.co.us

Colorado State Representative

Dave Williams

303-866-5525

dave.williams.house@state.co.us

Colorado State Senate

Kevin Priola

303-866-4855

kpriola@gmail.com

Colorado State Senate

Rhonda Fields

303-866-4879

rhonda.fields.senate@state.co.us 

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