Paying to police itself…
The nation’s largest seller of tobacco products — 7-eleven, Inc. — has agreed to new procedures aimed at cutting tobacco sales to minors.
“The fewer kids who start smoking, the fewer who will eventually die from smoking-related illnesses,” said Washington Attorney General Rob McKenna.
The 7-Eleven agreement is the seventh inked between retailers and a 32-state enforcement group. They include: Wal-Mart, Walgreens, Rite Aid and gas stations operating under the Exxon, Mobil, BP ARCO and Amoco brands.
According to McKenna, 7-Eleven agred to:
-check the ID of anyone who looks like he or she is under 27,
-prohibit the use of vending machines, self-serve advertising displays, free samples or the sale of cigarette lookalike products,
-and to hire an independent group to conduct random compliance checks of the 900 stores in the states that signed the deal.
“The fewer kids who start smoking, the fewer who will eventually die from smoking-related illnesses,” said Washington Attorney General Rob McKenna.
The 7-Eleven agreement is the seventh inked between retailers and a 32-state enforcement group. They include: Wal-Mart, Walgreens, Rite Aid and gas stations operating under the Exxon, Mobil, BP ARCO and Amoco brands.
According to McKenna, 7-Eleven agred to:
-check the ID of anyone who looks like he or she is under 27,
-prohibit the use of vending machines, self-serve advertising displays, free samples or the sale of cigarette lookalike products,
-and to hire an independent group to conduct random compliance checks of the 900 stores in the states that signed the deal.
* This story was originally published as a post from the blog "Eye On Olympia." Read all stories from this blog