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(The Center Square) – New Illinois laws that go into effect Jan. 1 will place more restrictions on electronic cigarettes. One law prohibits the advertising, marketing or promoting of an ...
Though the city-wide smoking ban remains intact, the vaping ban itself was lifted in 2016 due to a state law which was passed then, prohibiting e-cigarettes and vape products from being regulated in the same way as tobacco. In 2019 the city-wide vaping ban was reinstated, via a separate ordinance, by a unanimous vote from the City Council. [19 ...
On December 5, 2016 HUD passed a rule banning the use of tobacco products in common areas and within each home unit. [278] HUD did not include e-cigarettes in their list of prohibited tobacco products, and they will allow each public housing agency to make that decision. [278] The ban includes cigarettes, cigars, pipes and waterpipes (hookahs ...
The Smoke-Free Illinois Act (410 ILCS 82; Public Act 095-0017) is a comprehensive anti-smoking law that took effect in Illinois on January 1, 2008 (). It bans smoking inside most buildings and vehicles used by the general public, used as a place of employment, or owned by the government or another public body .
Gov. JB Pritzker signed more than 580 bills passed by legislators including ending a 1980s nuclear moratorium and the $50.4 billion state budget Videoconferencing while driving and vaping in ...
As overdoses increase in Illinois, lawmakers crafted bills to make new laws focusing on the dangers of fentanyl
The Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act (also known as the FSPTC Act) was signed into law by President Barack Obama on June 22, 2009. This bill changed the scope of tobacco policy in the United States by giving the FDA the ability to regulate tobacco products, similar to how it has regulated food and pharmaceuticals since the passing of the Pure Food and Drug Act in 1906.
2010: The Fiscal Year 2011 National Drug Control Budget proposed by the Obama administration devoted significant new resources, $340 million, to the prevention and treatment of drug abuse. [37] 2012: Colorado and Washington (state) passed laws to legalize the consumption, possession, and sale of marijuana.