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A00558 Summary:

BILL NOA00558A
 
SAME ASSAME AS S02833
 
SPONSORRosenthal L (MS)
 
COSPNSRDinowitz, Mosley, Jaffee, Galef, Thiele, Finch, Rivera, Simon, Ortiz, Vanel, Dickens, D'Urso, Lavine, Seawright, De La Rosa, Crespo, Bichotte, Glick, Lifton, Fahy, Weprin, Zebrowski, Taylor, Perry, Abinanti, Paulin, Cook, Gottfried, Epstein, Buttenschon, Montesano, Jacobson, Smullen, Sayegh, Romeo, Reyes, Fall, Rodriguez, Miller B, Griffin, Arroyo, Lawrence
 
MLTSPNSRDeStefano, Miller ML, Niou
 
Amd §§1399-aa, 1399-bb, 1399-cc, 1399-dd, 1399-ff, 1399-ll & 1399-mm, Pub Health L; amd §260.21, Pen L
 
Increases the age to purchase tobacco products from 18 years old to 21 years old.
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A00558 Floor Votes:

DATE:03/06/2019Assembly Vote  YEA/NAY: 120/26
Yes
Abbate
Yes
Crespo
ER
Gantt
Yes
LiPetri
Yes
Perry
Yes
Simon
Yes
Abinanti
Yes
Crouch
No
Garbarino
Yes
Lupardo
Yes
Pheffer Amato
Yes
Simotas
Yes
Arroyo
Yes
Cruz
No
Giglio
Yes
Magnarelli
Yes
Pichardo
Yes
Smith
No
Ashby
Yes
Cusick
Yes
Glick
No
Malliotakis
Yes
Pretlow
Yes
Smullen
No
Aubry
Yes
Cymbrowitz
Yes
Goodell
No
Manktelow
Yes
Quart
Yes
Solages
Yes
Barclay
Yes
Davila
Yes
Gottfried
Yes
McDonald
Yes
Ra
Yes
Stec
No
Barnwell
Yes
De La Rosa
Yes
Griffin
Yes
McDonough
Yes
Raia
Yes
Steck
Yes
Barrett
Yes
DenDekker
Yes
Gunther
Yes
McMahon
Yes
Ramos
Yes
Stern
Yes
Barron
Yes
DeStefano
No
Hawley
Yes
Mikulin
Yes
Raynor
Yes
Stirpe
No
Benedetto
Yes
Dickens
No
Hevesi
Yes
Miller B
Yes
Reilly
Yes
Tague
Yes
Bichotte
Yes
Dilan
Yes
Hunter
No
Miller MG
Yes
Reyes
Yes
Taylor
Yes
Blake
Yes
Dinowitz
Yes
Hyndman
ER
Miller ML
Yes
Richardson
Yes
Thiele
No
Blankenbush
No
DiPietro
Yes
Jacobson
Yes
Montesano
Yes
Rivera
Yes
Titus
No
Brabenec
Yes
D'Urso
Yes
Jaffee
No
Morinello
ER
Rodriguez
No
Vanel
Yes
Braunstein
Yes
Eichenstein
Yes
Jean-Pierre
Yes
Mosley
Yes
Romeo
No
Walczyk
Yes
Bronson
Yes
Englebright
Yes
Johns
Yes
Niou
Yes
Rosenthal D
Yes
Walker
Yes
Buchwald
Yes
Epstein
Yes
Jones
Yes
Nolan
Yes
Rosenthal L
Yes
Wallace
No
Burke
Yes
Fahy
Yes
Joyner
Yes
Norris
Yes
Rozic
Yes
Walsh
Yes
Buttenschon
Yes
Fall
Yes
Kim
Yes
O'Donnell
Yes
Ryan
Yes
Weinstein
No
Byrne
Yes
Fernandez
ER
Kolb
Yes
Ortiz
Yes
Salka
Yes
Weprin
Yes
Byrnes
No
Finch
No
Lalor
Yes
Otis
No
Santabarbara
Yes
Williams
Yes
Cahill
Yes
Fitzpatrick
Yes
Lavine
No
Palmesano
Yes
Sayegh
Yes
Woerner
No
Carroll
No
Friend
Yes
Lawrence
Yes
Palumbo
No
Schimminger
Yes
Wright
Yes
Colton
Yes
Frontus
Yes
Lentol
Yes
Paulin
Yes
Schmitt
Yes
Zebrowski
Yes
Cook
Yes
Galef
Yes
Lifton
Yes
Peoples-Stokes
Yes
Seawright
Yes
Mr. Speaker

‡ Indicates voting via videoconference
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A00558 Memo:

NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A558A
 
SPONSOR: Rosenthal L (MS)
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the public health law and the penal law, in relation to increasing the purchasing age for tobacco products from eighteen to twenty-one   PURPOSE OR GENERAL IDEA OF BILL: This bill will amend the public health law and the administrative code of New York City to increase the age in which an individual can buy cigarettes from eighteen to twenty-one years of age. Summary Of Specif- ic Provisions: Section one amends Subdivision 4 of section 1399-aa of the Public Health Law by deleting the age of "eighteen" and replacing it with "twenty- one." Section two amends Paragraphs (b), (c) and (f) of subdivision 2 of section l399-bb of the Public Health Law by removing "eighteen" an d replacing it with "twenty-one." Section three amends Subdivision 4 and 5 of section 1399-bb of the Public Health Law by removing "eighteen" and replacing it with "twenty- one." Section four amends Subdivisions 2, 3 and 7 of section 1399-cc of the Public Health Law by removing "eighteen" and replacing it with "twenty- one." Section five amends Subdivision (d) of Section 1399-dd of the Public Health Law by removing "eighteen" and replacing it with "twenty- one." Section six amends Subdivision I of Section 1399-ff of the Public Health Law by deleting the word "minor" and replacing it with "person under twenty-one years of age." Section seven amends Paragraphs (b) and (c) of Section 1399-11 of the Public Health Law by removing "eighteen" and replacing it with "twenty- one." Section eight amends Subdivision 1 of paragraphs (b) and (c) of subdivi- sion 2 of Section 1399-mm of the Public Health Law is amended by remov- ing "eighteen" and replacing it with "twenty-one." Section nine amends Subdivision 3 of section 260.21 of the Penal Law by removing "eighteen" and replacing it with "twenty-one." Section ten sets forth the effective date.   JUSTIFICATION: Every year in New York State, 53,000 youth under the age of eighteen become regular smokers. Many of them tried their first cigarette before they entered high school. 389,000 youth under the age of eighteen in New York will ultimately die prematurely from smoking. Of those youth who become regular smokers, half of them will eventually die from smoking related disease. They will suffer from cancer, emphysema, heart disease, asthma, hypertension, and other ailments. New York spend s over $8 billion caring for people made sick from smoking and New York residents' State and Federal tax burden from smoking caused healthcare expenditures is approximately $900 per household. The key to reducing the number of smokers in New York is to stop them before they start. By raising the smoking age to twenty-one, we can remove cigarettes from high schoolers and eliminates a popular source of tobacco from underage children. The best way to reduce the number of citizens who smoke is to prevent the initiation of tobacco use. A fairly short time passes between initi- ation and addiction, and most interventions miss this small window of opportunity. The majority of smokers sixteen years of age and younger are intermittent users; addictive smoking requiring regular purchased begins later, at a median age of seventeen. Raising the purchase age provides an opportunity to expose intermittent users to strong counter- marketing and de-normalizing campaigns. Keeping our youth tobacco free for a longer period of time allows such interventions to reach them before they become regular users. Simply delaying tobacco use provides a number of benefits. The earlier people begin to smoke, the higher their risk for contracting lung cancer and other health problems. Just being able to stop a small percentage of these youth from smoking will yield incredible savings in medical bills and lost work. Since tobacco use continues to persist among youth and young adults, New York State must take further action. Preventing young adults from taking up smoking is critical because, according to the Surgeon General, 88% of adult smokers started the habit before age 18, and 90 percent of the people who purchase cigarettes for minors are between the ages of 18 and 20. By raising the legal purchase age to twenty-one, we will help prevent a generation of New Yorkers from becoming addicted to smoking and ulti- mately save thousands of lives. By delaying children and young adults access to tobacco products, we will reduce the likelihood they ever start smoking and therefore create a healthier state.   PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: 2017-18: A.273 - Advanced to Third Reading; S.3978 - Reported to Finance 2015-16: A.237 - Referred to Health 2013-14: A.7105 -.Referred to Health; S.4863 - Referred to Health   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS: None.   EFFECTIVE DATE: This bill shall take effect on the one hundred twentieth day after it shall have become a law.
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