(1) Except as provided in
subsection (7) of this section, cigarettes may not be sold or
offered for sale in this state or offered for sale or sold to
persons located in this state unless the cigarettes have been
tested in accordance with the test method and meet the
performance standard specified in this section, a written
certification has been filed by the manufacturer with the state
director of fire protection in accordance with RCW 19.305.030,
and the cigarettes have been marked in accordance with RCW 19.305.040.
(a) Testing of cigarettes shall be conducted in accordance
with the American society of testing and materials (ASTM)
standard E2187-04, "standard test method for measuring the
ignition strength of cigarettes."
(b) Testing shall be conducted on ten layers of filter
paper.
(c) No more than twenty-five percent of the cigarettes
tested in a test trial in accordance with this section may
exhibit full-length burns. Forty replicate tests comprise a
complete test trial for each cigarette tested.
(d) The performance standard required by (c) of this
subsection may only be applied to a complete test trial.
(e) Written certifications shall be based upon testing
conducted by a laboratory that has been accredited pursuant to
standard ISO/IEC 17025 of the international organization for
standardization (ISO), or other comparable accreditation standard
required by the state director of fire protection.
(f) Laboratories conducting testing in accordance with this
section shall implement a quality control and quality assurance
program that includes a procedure that determines the
repeatability of the testing results. The repeatability value
may be no greater than 0.19.
(g) This section does not require additional testing if
cigarettes are tested consistent with this chapter for any other
purpose.
(h) Testing performed or sponsored by the state director of
fire protection to determine a cigarette's compliance with the
performance standard required must be conducted in accordance
with this section.
(2) Each cigarette listed in a certification submitted
pursuant to RCW 19.305.030 that uses lowered permeability bands
in the cigarette paper to achieve compliance with the performance
standard set forth in this section must have at least two
nominally identical bands on the paper surrounding the tobacco
column. At least one complete band must be located at least
fifteen millimeters from the lighting end of the cigarette. For
cigarettes on which the bands are positioned by design, there
must be at least two bands fully located at least fifteen
millimeters from the lighting end and ten millimeters from the
filter end of the tobacco column, or ten millimeters from the
labeled end of the tobacco column for nonfiltered cigarettes.
(3) A manufacturer of a cigarette that the state director of
fire protection determines cannot be tested in accordance with
the test method prescribed in subsection (1)(a) of this section
shall propose a test method and performance standard for the
cigarette to the state director of fire protection. Upon
approval of the proposed test method and a determination by the
state director of fire protection that the performance standard
proposed by the manufacturer is equivalent to the performance
standard prescribed in subsection (1)(c) of this section, the
manufacturer may employ that test method and performance standard
to certify the cigarette pursuant to RCW 19.305.030. If the
state director of fire protection determines that another state
has enacted reduced cigarette ignition propensity standards that
include a test method and performance standard that are the same
as those contained in this chapter, and the state director of
fire protection finds that the officials responsible for
implementing those requirements have approved the proposed
alternative test method and performance standard for a particular
cigarette proposed by a manufacturer as meeting the fire safety
standards of that state's law or regulation under a legal
provision comparable to this section, then the state director of
fire protection shall authorize that manufacturer to employ the
alternative test method and performance standard to certify that
cigarette for sale in this state, unless the state director of
fire protection demonstrates a reasonable basis why the
alternative test should not be accepted under this chapter. All
other applicable requirements of this section apply to the
manufacturer.
(4) Each manufacturer shall maintain copies of the reports
of all tests conducted on all cigarettes offered for sale for a
period of three years, and shall make copies of these reports
available to the state director of fire protection and the
attorney general upon written request. Any manufacturer who
fails to make copies of these reports available within sixty days
of receiving a written request is subject to a civil penalty not
to exceed ten thousand dollars for each day after the sixtieth
day that the manufacturer does not make the copies available.
(5) The state director of fire protection may adopt a
subsequent ASTM standard test method for measuring the ignition
strength of cigarettes upon a finding that the subsequent method
does not result in a change in the percentage of full-length
burns exhibited by any tested cigarette when compared to the
percentage of full-length burns the same cigarette would exhibit
when tested in accordance with ASTM standard E2187-04 and the
performance standard in subsection (1)(c) of this section.
(6) Beginning in 2012, the state director of fire protection
shall review the effectiveness of this section and report every
three years to the legislature the state director of fire
protection's findings and, if appropriate, recommendations for
legislation to improve the effectiveness of this section. The
report and legislative recommendations shall be submitted no
later than July 1st of each three-year reporting period.
(7) The requirements of subsection (1) of this section do
not prohibit wholesale or retail dealers from selling their
existing inventory of cigarettes on or after August 1, 2009, if
the wholesale or retailer dealer can establish that state tax
stamps were affixed to the cigarettes prior to August 1, 2009,
and if the wholesale or retail dealer can establish that the
inventory was purchased prior to August 1, 2009, in comparable
quantity to the inventory purchased during the same period of the
prior year.
(8) The implementation and substance of the New York fire
safety standards for cigarettes, New York Executive Law section
156-c, Fire Safety Standards for Cigarettes, shall be persuasive
authority in the implementation of this chapter.
[2008 c 239 § 2.]