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Attachment B <br />It <br />--ADEN HILLS <br />ORDINANCE NO.2024-011 <br />CITY OF ARDEN HILLS <br />RAMSEY COUNTY, MINNESOTA <br />AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CHAPTER 3 — TOBACCO PRODUCTS <br />OF THE ARDEN HILLS CITY CODE <br />THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF ARDEN HILLS, MINNESOTA, ORDAINS: <br />SECTION 1. Chapter 3 — Licenses and Regulations, Section 350 — Tobacco Products — <br />Subsections 350.02 Definitions; 350.03 License; 350.07 Self Service Sales; and 350.11 <br />Administrative Fines, Suspension or Revocation, are hereby amended by deleting the [s4ieker�] <br />language and adding the underlined language as follows: <br />Section 350 - Tobacco Products <br />(amended 5,114,112) <br />350.01 Purpose and Intent. <br />Because the City recognizes that: <br />Tobacco use has been shown to be the cause of several serious health problems which <br />subsequently place a financial burden on all levels of government; this ordinance is intended to <br />regulate the sale of tobacco, tobacco -related devices, electronic delivery devices, and nicotine or <br />lobelia delivery products for the purpose of enforcing and furthering existing laws, and to protect <br />youth and young adults against the serious effects associated with use and initiation. <br />The use of tobacco products has devastating health and economic consequences. Tobacco use is <br />the foremost preventable cause of premature death in America. It causes half a million deaths <br />annually and has been responsible for 20.8 million premature deaths in the U.S. over the past 50 <br />years since the first Surgeon General's report on smoking in 1964. This leads to more than $300 <br />billion in health care and lost worker productivity costs each year. In Minnesota, smoking was <br />responsible for $3.19 billion in excess medical expenditures and the deaths of 6,312 individuals <br />in 2014. <br />Youth and young people are particularly susceptible to the addictive properties of tobacco <br />products, and are particularly likely to become lifelong users. An estimated 5.6 million youth <br />aged 0 to 17 are projected to die prematurely from a tobacco -related illness if prevalence rates do <br />not change. National data show that about 95 percent of adult smokers begin smoking before <br />they turn 21. The ages of 18 to 21 are a critical period when many smokers move from <br />experimental smoking to regular, daily use. Electronic delivery device use among youth has <br />recently tripled. Young minds are particularly susceptible to the addictive properties of nicotine. <br />As a result, approximately 3 out of 4 teen smokers end up smoking into adulthood. <br />Public health research and tobacco industry documents and marketing reveal that tobacco <br />companies have used fruit, candy, and alcohol flavors as a way to target youth and young adults. <br />Page 1 of 10 <br />