The Associated Press
OLYMPIA — A new push is on by state lawmakers to raise the legal age to buy tobacco from 18 to 21.
An effort to raise it last year didn’t gain traction despite publicized support from state Attorney General Bob Ferguson, but lawmakers filed a new bill in advance of the legislative session that began Monday.
The House version of the bill, House Bill 2313, has a hearing in the House Committee on Health Care and Wellness at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday.
A new law in Hawaii recently raised its smoking age to 21 — becoming the first state to do so.
The primary sponsor of the House measure, Rep. Tina Orwall, D-Des Moines, remains optimistic about Washington following Hawaii’s lead.
“I think it’s gaining momentum,” she said in a phone interview Wednesday.
Orwall’s measure points to a study by the National Institute of Medicine to bolster the bill’s case.
The study said raising the legal smoking age to 21 would reduce the smoking rate by about 12 percent and eventually reduce smoking-related deaths by 10 percent.
Of adults that become daily smokers, about 90 percent say they started smoking before turning 19, according to that study, released last March.
“We know we have this window where we can kind of prevent this lifelong addiction,” Orwall said.
In the House, the bill has more bipartisan sponsorship than last year.
It’s sponsored by Republican leadership such as Rep. Shelly Short, R-Addy, the chairwoman of the Republican caucus in the House.
There are still significant roadblocks for the bill in the Senate.
Vaping
Sen. Michael Baumgartner, R-Spokane, chairman of the Senate’s Commerce and Labor Committee where the Senate version of last year’s attempt to raise the smoking age died, said he wants more information brought to the Legislature about vaping and e-cigarettes, which he said are potentially healthier alternatives to cigarettes.
Purchase of vaping devices and e-cigarettes by people younger than 21 also would be banned by the bills.
However, Baumgartner said he was open to having a hearing on the measure in the coming months.
“My position is if you can fight and die for your country, you ought to be able to have a cigarette,” he added.
It would be a gross misdemeanor to sell or give tobacco or nicotine products like e-cigarettes to people younger than 21 if the smoking age is raised, but underage people caught with tobacco would face no penalties other than having the tobacco taken from them.
The state Office of Financial Management estimated last year that raising the smoking age would cost the state $39.6 million in the 2015-17 budget cycle because of anticipated loss of tax revenue related to the state taxes on tobacco and cigarettes.
A report by the state Department of Health said smoking-related illnesses cost each Washington household about $628 a year in health-care expenses.
Republican Rep. Joe Schmick of Colfax, a member of the House Committee on Health Care & Wellness, opposes the bill.
“I just believe that people at age 18, if they’ve been given the proper education and the pros and cons about smoking, they should be able to make their own decision,” he said.
Sen. Mark Miloscia, R-Federal Way, said 18-year-olds aren’t allowed to use drugs like meth or heroin simply because they’re 18.
Miloscia is the primary sponsor of the Senate version of the bill.
“We know for a fact it kills people,” he said.

