Tag: West Virginia

  • Bill Regulating Vape Shops Moves Forward in W.Va

    Bill Regulating Vape Shops Moves Forward in W.Va

    A bill sponsored by Del. David McCormick ( R-Monongalia) advanced from West Virginia’s House Health and Human Resources Committee and now moves to Judiciary. House Bill 5437, the Vape Safety Act, would require vape and smoke shops — defined as retailers devoting at least 33% of floor space to tobacco or vapor products — to obtain a license from the West Virginia Alcohol Beverage Control Administration, pass background checks, and pay $1,200 in annual fees, with penalties of up to $10,000 and one year in jail for unlicensed operators. The bill also bars certain felony offenders from ownership and prohibits shops from being used as residences.

    “The purpose of House Bill 5437 is to regulate an industry or a business segment that is virtually unregulated and virtually untaxed,” said McCormick. “These vape shops are all over the state. There are many bad actors. Many are not here legally. They live in the shops. They’re selling to underage kids. They’re marketing to underage kids.”

    The legislation would create a public Vapor Product Directory requiring manufacturers to certify products have marketing authorization from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration or a pending premarket tobacco product application. Products removed from the directory would need to be cleared within 21 days or be treated as contraband. Additional provisions tighten labeling, ingredient disclosure, and youth-marketing restrictions, with McCormick saying the bill is aimed at curbing underage sales and strengthening oversight of the sector.

  • Juul Labs Settles with West Virginia

    Juul Labs Settles with West Virginia

    Image: Roman Motizov | Adobe Stock

    West Virginia has reached a settlement agreement with e-cigarette manufacturer Juul Labs in litigation about the company’s advertising and marketing practices, according to state Attorney General Patrick Morrisey.

    Juul Labs has agreed to pay the state $7.9 million, based on accusations that the company violated West Virginia’s Consumer Credit and Protection Act, according to media reports.

    The company was accused of “engaging in unfair or deceptive acts or practices in the manufacturing, designing, selling, marketing, promoting and distributing of e-cigarettes” in the state, especially promotions targeting underage users, according to Morrisey.

    “This settlement puts companies like Juul in check to not copy Big Tobacco’s playbook and gear marketing strategies toward underage people,” he said. “In Juul’s case, we have alleged it has deceived consumers about its nicotine strength, misrepresented the nicotine equivalency of its products to traditional cigarettes and understated the risks of addiction that occur with such powerful levels of nicotine.”

    The settlement represents “yet another step in Juul Labs’ ongoing commitment to resolve issues from the company’s past,” said Austin Finan, vice president of corporate communications at Juul Labs.

    “The terms of the agreement, like prior settlements, provide financial resources to further combat underage use and develop cessation programs, and they reflect our current business practices, which were implemented as part of our company-wide reset in the fall of 2019,” Finan said. “With West Virginia having the highest cigarette smoking rate in the U.S., we hope that some funds will go directly to interventions to reduce the use of combustible cigarettes and improve public health in the state.”

    Juul has now settled with “40 states and territories, providing hundreds of millions of dollars to the participating states,” according to Finan.