AG leads bipartisan letter in support of National Youth Tobacco Survey
HARRISBURG – Attorney General Dave Sunday led a bipartisan coalition of 22 states in submitting a comment letter to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Department of Health and Human Services supporting continuation of the National Youth Tobacco Survey.
The survey is an annual study to assess the use of smoking and vaping among middle and high school students. It provides valuable insight into youth tobacco use and emerging products and has shaped efforts led by Attorneys General to curb youth tobacco use for over two decades.
“Tobacco use continues with youths who are attracted to trendy products, such as vapes, without fully realizing the harmful effects. So we need as much information as we can find on why children use tobacco, so we can shape programming that will resonate with kids,” Attorney General Sunday said. “The most effective way to tackle a dilemma such as youth tobacco use is to promote deterrence, so bad habits stop before they start.”
The letter is submitted in response to a CDC invitation for public comment on continuation of the survey. The CDC notes that it intends to make revisions to the 2026-2028 NYTS but has yet to identify specific proposed changes.
In 1998, 52 state and territorial Attorneys General entered into a settlement with the four largest tobacco companies in the United States to resolve dozens of lawsuits. In addition to the tobacco settlement, Attorneys General have undertaken several initiatives to limit youth exposure to tobacco and nicotine products. These efforts include suing tobacco manufacturers to prevent violations of the MSA’s provisions intended to protect youth, urging film studios, creative guilds, and streaming platforms to curb tobacco imagery in popular media, entering into agreements with major retail chains to limit the accessibility and appeal of products to youth in the retail environment, and enforcing a range of state-specific tobacco control and consumer fraud laws.
The Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General enforces the terms of the MSA, including prohibitions on advertising and marketing of cigarettes, and enforcement of a law that requires non-MSA companies to deposit money into escrow accounts for the benefit of Pennsylvania in the event of lawsuits, and another law that requires cigarette manufacturers to certify their products, published on OAG’s website, which gives the Commonwealth the authority to seize any cigarettes not certified for sale in Pennsylvania as contraband.
In submitting the letter, Sunday is joined by the attorneys general of Arizona, Connecticut, California, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nevada, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia and Puerto Rico.