Retailers say tobacco age hike will cost them business

smoking
A retailers group says their stores near the Illinois borders will lose business if the state’s legal tobacco age is raised from 18 to 21. (Photo by julie/flickr)

By Illinois Radio Network

SPRINGFIELD – You could soon have to be 21 years old to buy a pack of cigarettes in Illinois.

Lawmakers in Springfield could vote this month on a plan to increase the tobacco age from 18 to 21. The bill is pending in the Senate.

The American Lung Association says a higher age will make it tougher for teens to start smoking.

But the people who sell cigarettes in the state say the new age will make it easier for Indiana, Missouri, Kentucky, Iowa and Wisconsin to lure their customers away.

Bill Fleischli of the Illinois Association of Convenience Stores said the proposal will “make the borders wider.”

Fleischli said if smokers leave the state to buy a pack of cigarettes, chances are they’ll buy gas, groceries and lottery tickets out the state as well.

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