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GM Tobacco 2619 East Lake Street Minneapolis The tobacco shop was destroyed by fire. [1] [23] GM Tobacco 2740 Minnehaha Avenue, Suite 100 Minneapolis The tobacco shop suffered major fire damage. [1] [25] Gopuff: 815 Cedar Avenue Minneapolis The building of the food delivery service was destroyed by fire. [1] [25] Goodwill: 1239 University ...
The state is seeking $58 million from tobacco companies Philip Morris and R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, alleging that they underpaid what they owe Minnesota in a landmark 1998 lawsuit settlement over the ...
Springfield, June 11, 2011, banned in all enclosed workplaces, including all restaurants, bars, and retail tobacco shops, after public vote of 53%–47% on April 5, 2011; exempts only private residences and 20% of hotel and motel rooms, [189] [190] but partially repealed by unanimous vote of the City Council on May 7, 2012, to exempt cigar bars ...
This first Minnesota act also limited smoking indoors at public places and private meetings. Minnesota passed the Freedom to Breathe Act on May 16, 2007. This act was passed with the intent of protecting the public from health hazards of secondhand smoke by banning smoking in public indoor areas not covered by the 1975 law. An indoor area is ...
Ciresi's Minneapolis law firm, Robins, Kaplan, Miller & Ciresi, [2] of which he was the chair, settled with the tobacco companies in 1998 with an agreement for the tobacco defendants to pay the state of Minnesota $6 billion. The law firm donated $30 million to the Minneapolis Foundation in 1998, a contribution made possible by the settlement ...
Branson, July 1, 2015, banned in all enclosed public places and workplaces by unanimous Board of Aldermen vote in October 2014; exempts up to 20% of designated hotel and motel smoking rooms, tobacco shops, smoking lounges in tobacco-related businesses, private homes, outdoor areas in places of employment, outdoor patios of restaurants, and golf ...
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State tobacco laws partly changed in 1992 under the George H.W. Bush administration when Congress enacted the Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Administration Reorganization Act, whose Synar Amendment forced states to create their own laws to have a minimum age of eighteen to purchase tobacco or else lose funding from the Substance Abuse ...