Senate bill S 7 51, which restricts retail sale of certain nitrous-oxide products, advanced through committee amendment and a recorded second reading.
Sponsors and committee members said the bill responds to a recent trend in which flavored, attractively packaged nitrous-oxide canisters and related products have been sold through vape and novelty retailers and have been linked to youth misuse. A committee amendment clarified exemptions for legitimate culinary and dental uses, limited sales in tobacco retail establishments and added penalty language that could lead to business-license suspension for repeated offenses.
Senators discussed the size and source of these products, noting some are manufactured overseas and marketed in candy-like packaging that appeals to young people. Committee sponsors included industry-specific exemptions (automotive, dental, restaurant use) and a requirement that track-use products be rendered unpalatable for human consumption via a bittering additive in some contexts.
After floor debate and questions, the committee amendment was adopted and the Senate recorded a second-reading vote of 42 to 0, allowing the bill to proceed in the legislative process.
The amendment sponsor said enforcement and retailer licensing will be managed under existing state frameworks; the bill's text includes penalties and business-license consequences for repeated violations.