Safety Group Urges Others to Follow N.Y. Lead to Curb Cigarette-Caused Fires

August 6, 2004

The number of fires caused by lighted tobacco products – almost always cigarettes – increased by a stunning 19 percent in the most recent year studied, according to research by the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA).

The Quincy, Mass.-based group used the five-year old study to renew its call for laws requiring that cigarettes be designed to stop burning when not actively smoked, such as the one that went into effect in New York state last month.

Cigarettes are the leading cause of fatal fires in the U.S., according to NFPA. Smoking materials led to one out of four fire deaths in 1999, more than any other cause of fire.

New York is the only state that has passed the cigarette-burning safety law. Starting June 28, cigarettes sold in New York must be self-extinguishing and all cigarette brands must be tested to make sure they self-extinguish at least 75 percent of the time.

NFPA’s analysis sheds light on how cigarettes lead to fatal fires. Contrary to the popular image, most victims of smoking-material fires did not fall asleep smoking. Many are not even smokers. Rather, these fires typically started when someone abandoned or improperly disposed of smoking materials.

Most victims were in the room where the fire started, and most had some condition that limited their ability to get out. Often they were asleep, but a significant number were impaired by drugs, alcohol, disability or old age. Indeed, people older than 64 are more likely to die in smoking-material fires than younger people, even though they are less likely to smoke, accoording to the NFPA..

In 1999, smoking-material fires increased 19 percent over the previous year to 167,700, resulting in 807 civilian deaths, 2,193 civilian injuries, and $559.1 million in direct property damage. Deaths and injuries both decreased by 11 percent from 1998 to 1999, but property damage costs, adjusted for inflation, increased by 33 percent.

“Cigarette fires are a major cause of death that we know how to address,” said James M. Shannon, NFPA president and chief executive officer. “A cigarette touching something combustible can take significant time to produce a fire. Cut down the burning time of cigarettes and you can prevent fires.”

The effort to prevent deaths from cigarette-caused fires has a long history. In 1979, after a fire started by a cigarette killed five young children in a Boston suburb, the late U.S. Rep. Joseph Moakley (D-Mass.) introduced a bill that would have required the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) to regulate cigarettes as a fire hazard. In 1987, a federally-mandated study found that it was possible to manufacture cigarettes that would be less likely to start fires.

The National Institute of Standards and Technology later developed a method for testing whether cigarettes were fire-safe. Moakley introduced legislation calling for the CPSC to develop standards for fire-safe cigarettes in 1994 and again in 1999. Earlier this year, U.S. Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.) and U.S. Rep. Edward Markey (D-Mass.) introduced the Cigarette Fire Safety Act of 2004 (H.R. 4155), which would require the CPSC to promulgate a standard for fire-safe cigarettes around the country. The bill is now before the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.

“Will we continue to allow cigarette fires to kill hundreds of people every year, smokers and non-smokers, adults and children?” Shannon asked. “Or will we act on what we know – and require that cigarettes be made fire-safe?”

NFPA is international nonprofit organization that works to reduce the worldwide burden of fire and other hazards by advocating consensus codes and standards, research, training and education.