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Bill

HB 430

Firearms and Ammunition - As introduced, enacts the "Protect Kids Not Guns Act." - Amends TCA Title 4; Title 8; Title 10; Title 13; Title 16; Title 29; Title 33; Title 36; Title 37; Title 38; Title 39; Title 40; Title 47; Title 49; Title 50; Title 55; Title 58; Title 65; Title 68 and Title 70.

114th Regular Session (2025-2026) Introduced by Justin Jones

Raises the tobacco/nicotine age to 21 and creates a permit-based retail regime (in-store, delivery, online) to curb youth vaping, with enforcement and penalties.

P2C, ref. to Judiciary Committee
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HB 430

Summary — HB 430: Protect Youth From Harms of Vaping & Nicotine

Status: Introduced (First read Mar 19, 2025); referred to Judiciary 1 (and, if favorable, Finance and Rules)
Short title: Protect Youth From Harms of Vaping & Nicotine

Purpose / Intent

The bill is intended to reduce youth access to nicotine and vaping products by (1) raising the legal minimum sales age for all tobacco- and nicotine-containing products to 21 and (2) creating a new, permit‑based regulatory regime for retail sales (including in-person, delivery, and remote/online sellers). The stated public‑health goal is to curb youth initiation and nicotine addiction.

Key provisions

  • New statutory chapter (Chapter 18D) establishing a Tobacco Products Retail Sales framework with:
    • Broad definitions covering:
    • “Tobacco product” (includes products containing tobacco or nicotine from any source, alternative nicotine products, vapor products, e‑liquid, and components);
    • “Vapor product,” “alternative nicotine product,” “e‑liquid,” and terms for retail, delivery, and remote sellers.
    • Minimum‑sales‑age change: prohibits sale of tobacco products to persons under age 21 (explicit in bill title and structure).
    • Permit requirement: retail dealers who sell tobacco products must hold a tobacco retail sales permit. Separate permit types for:
    • Retail seller (in‑store)
    • Delivery seller
    • Remote seller (online/mail)
    • Issuing and enforcement authority: the Commission (as defined in G.S. 18B‑101) is authorized to administer the law, issue permits, inspect premises, and coordinate enforcement with the ALE (Alcohol Law Enforcement) Division.
    • Inspection authority: Commission agents and ALE personnel may inspect permitted premises and review books/records; refusal to permit inspection can trigger enforcement action. Obstruction of an inspection is made a Class 2 misdemeanor.
    • Administrative penalties: for violations, the Commission may suspend permits (up to three years), revoke permits, and impose fines. Established fine schedule (examples included in bill text):
    • Up to $500 for a first violation;
    • Up to $750 for a second violation within three years;
    • Up to $1,000 for a third violation within three years;
    • Combined suspensions and fines also permitted.
    • Proof‑of‑age standards: enumerates acceptable identity documents for verifying purchaser age (driver’s license, special ID, military ID, passport).
    • Coverage of delivery/remote sales: establishes permitting and regulatory obligations for sellers that deliver or sell remotely, including registration and likely age‑verification responsibilities.

Who is affected

  • Retailers of tobacco and nicotine products (brick‑and‑mortar; delivery services; online/remote sellers) — new permit and compliance obligations.
  • Youth and consumers aged under 21 — restricted from legally purchasing tobacco/nicotine products.
  • State regulators and law enforcement (the Commission, ALE Division, Department of Revenue) — new enforcement responsibilities.
  • Downstream impacts could include wholesalers/suppliers, point‑of‑sale systems (for age verification), and businesses that currently sell vaping products.

Enforcement & penalties

  • Administrative enforcement by the Commission working with ALE.
  • Fines escalate on repeat violations within a three‑year look‑back; permit suspensions up to three years and revocation are authorized.
  • Criminal penalty (Class 2 misdemeanor) for resisting inspections.

Procedural / timeline notes

  • At introduction the bill established the new Chapter 18D structure and was referred to Judiciary 1 (with possible additional referrals).
  • The bill text as provided does not specify an explicit effective date for all provisions; implementation timing (e.g., when permits will be required) would be determined either in the act or by the implementing agency rules.

Potential impacts / considerations

  • Public health: Raising the purchase age and strengthening retail controls are expected to reduce youth access and initiation of vaping and nicotine use.
  • Compliance costs: Retailers (especially small retailers and remote/delivery sellers) will face permit application processes, possible licensing fees, and costs to implement reliable age‑verification systems and recordkeeping.
  • Enforcement burden: State enforcement agencies will require resources to administer permits, perform inspections, and adjudicate violations (staffing and budget impacts would depend on implementation scope).
  • Regulatory coverage: The bill expands state authority over non‑combustible nicotine products (vapes, e‑liquids, alternative nicotine), closing some regulatory gaps that previously distinguished tobacco leaf products from other nicotine delivery systems.

If you want, I can:
- Extract and summarize the bill’s later articles (permitting application steps, fee schedules, or age‑verification procedures) if you provide those sections; or
- Draft a short briefing memo on likely implementation challenges and resource needs for regulators and retailers.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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