The state House Health Care & Wellness Committee approved a bill in a bipartisan 12-3 vote on Tuesday to raise the state’s legal smoking age to 21 from 18.
State Attorney General Bob Ferguson requested the bill to raise the state’s legal smoking age. The full House and Senate still need to approve the bill, and Gov. Jay Inslee needs to sign the bill before it would become law.
“This legislation will protect young Washingtonians from the health consequences of a lifetime of addiction,” Ferguson said in a media release. “If we do nothing, more than 100,000 kids in our state are currently projected to die prematurely from the effects of smoking. But if we continue to work together across party lines, we can have a major impact on those numbers.”
The proposed law, Senate Bill 5494 and House Bill 1458 sponsored by Sen. Mark Miloscia, R-Federal Way, and Rep. Tina Orwall D-Des Moines, respectively, would raise Washington’s age to legally use and possess tobacco and nicotine products.
“This bill will help keep our schools free of tobacco products to reduce access to highly addictive substances, like nicotine, and protect our youth from a life of addiction and poor health,” Orwall said.
“I am pleased my colleagues recognize the benefits in saving lives and driving down healthcare costs that would result from this action,” Miloscia said. “We’ll continue to push for broad, bipartisan support to get this passed.”
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