Dunwoody’s Vape Crackdown Poised To Snuff Out Stand-Alone Shops

Dunwoody is moving toward a citywide crackdown on stand-alone vape shops, advancing a proposed ordinance that would sharply limit where electronic-nicotine retailers can set up shop. The measure cleared its first reading at the April 27 City Council meeting and is slated for a final vote next Monday, the same day a 90-day freeze on new vape businesses runs out. If it passes, the rule would effectively bar dedicated vape retailers from Dunwoody Village, the Perimeter Center districts and most other commercial areas.

The draft ordinance spells out a strict definition of a vape shop. A business would qualify if at least 25% of its retail sales come from alternative-nicotine products or if at least 25% of its interior floor space is devoted to those items. Grocery stores, convenience stores and traditional tobacco retailers would be exempt from the restriction, according to Atlanta News First.

The City Council first hit pause on new permits in February, adopting a 90-day moratorium so staff could craft tighter land-use rules. A related text amendment was scheduled to go before the Planning Commission earlier this spring. In its monthly report, the City of Dunwoody noted a March hearing on the proposal and said the moratorium was meant to give officials time to respond to a rise in stand-alone vape retailers.

Council debate: land use or a ban?

On the council, the measure has already sparked a philosophical fight over whether this is smart zoning or a backdoor ban. At the April hearing, one council member questioned whether Dunwoody was turning into a “nanny society,” while staff stressed that the ordinance is aimed at where businesses can locate, not at policing individual behavior, according to Rough Draft Atlanta.

Planning commission split and public comment

The Dunwoody Planning Commission narrowly declined to recommend the ordinance in a 3-2 vote. Dissenting members argued that CBD and delta-8 THC products should also be addressed and raised concerns about treating vape shops differently from other contentious uses. During public comment, residents including a mental-health therapist told council members they had seen teens grappling with nicotine addiction and urged tougher limits on storefronts that specialize in vapes, Atlanta News First reported.

Neighboring cities set the precedent

Dunwoody would not be the first suburb to clamp down. Alpharetta already treats “smoke shop and tobacco store” as a separately regulated use and applies distance and placement rules in its development code, as outlined in Alpharetta’s Unified Development Code (Municode). Milton and other Perimeter-area communities have also moved in recent years to limit stand-alone vape retailers, a trend local coverage has pointed to as a model for Dunwoody’s approach…

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