NEW! Explore the Garrett County Community Food Network for local food resources, tools, and funding opportunities!

Garrett County Food Network
Go! Garrett County

By Diane Lee, Public Information Officer, Garrett County Health Department

Staff members from the Garrett County Health Department (GCHD) and underage buyers from both county high schools worked with officers from the Garrett County Sheriff’s Office to conduct tobacco compliance checks around the county from July 2021 through March 2022.  

These checks are designed to ensure that tobacco products are not being sold to minors and that the tobacco product placement law is being followed.  Maryland State law requires persons to be at least twenty-one years old to purchase or possess any tobacco product.

During fiscal year 2022, there were 103 compliance visits completed with 9 violations occurring for a compliance rate of 91%.

“Most of our merchants are compliant and do a very good job preventing underage sales to minors,” said Lori Peck, Tobacco Prevention Coordinator, GCHD. The businesses which sold tobacco to an underage buyer were Midway Discount Beverages, Walmart, Hartman’s Accident Amoco, Friendsville Liquor Store, BFS #73-Friendsville, 7-11 Keysers Ridge, Rite Price, Winner’s Circle, and Shop N Save-Oakland.  

In Garrett County, violations can lead to civil fines of up to $300 for the business owner for the first offense, $1,000 second offense, and $3,000 for a third offense and referral to the State Comptroller’s office for repeat offenders within a 2-year time period of the first offense.

Tobacco compliance operations will continue in fiscal year 2023. Before visits begin each year, vendors receive a packet of educational materials which contains training information for employees and promotional materials to make customers aware of tobacco laws. Every vendor also receives a letter that notifies them of the law, penalties for violation of the law, and the start date of local compliance visits. 

“The goal of our compliance operations is to have the salespersons confirm proof of age before making a sale,” said Peck. “Research demonstrates that more than 80% of tobacco users started using before they were 18 years old, so preventing tobacco sales to minors is one barrier to youth tobacco initiation.”

Students participants are 20 years old or younger at the time of the operation and receive training from health department staff and law enforcement officers about the compliance check procedures. Students who enter a store to purchase tobacco are under observation of a law enforcement officer. If an illegal sale is completed the officer will interview the clerk to determine possible penalties.    

For more information about tobacco compliance, contact the health department at 301-334-7730 or 301-895-3111. Funds from the Maryland Department of Health Tobacco Enforcement grant support the Compliance Check Program.

John Corbin (BS, CPT, MCPT, CSNC)

Pin It on Pinterest

Skip to content