New York City's drive to shut down illegal smoke shops is continuing at scale, but officials acknowledge it remains a difficult fight. The city says it has padlocked nearly 1,500 illegal smoke shops in just two years, a figure that underlines how widespread unlicensed sales of cannabis and vapes had become across the five boroughs.
The Bronx has been at the centre of the effort. More than 300 of the shuttered shops were in that borough alone, reflecting how heavily concentrated the unlicensed trade had become there. The crackdown targets stores selling cannabis, vapes and untaxed tobacco without the licences the city requires.
The core difficulty, according to authorities, is that closing a shop does not always keep it closed. Some of the businesses that are sealed simply carry on, reopening or continuing to sell despite official orders to stop. That persistence is what keeps drawing enforcement teams back to the same locations.
A recent case in the Bronx illustrated the pattern. A smoke shop near East Gun Hill Road and Fish Avenue kept selling after it had been ordered to shut down, prompting the Sheriff's Department to return to the premises. The repeat visit set the stage for a fresh seizure of goods that had remained on sale.
The haul from that shop was substantial. Deputies removed more than 800 pounds of product, including 364 pounds of flavored vapes and nearly 250 pounds of THC vapes. The quantities offered a snapshot of how much unlicensed stock a single storefront could still be holding even after being told to close.
City officials framed the operation around public safety and lost revenue. The Department of Finance said that businesses which violate sealing orders and continue to sell illegal cannabis, vape and untaxed tobacco products undermine public safety, and noted that no taxes were being collected at the shop in question. For the city, the untaxed sales are part of the harm, not a side issue.
Not everyone is convinced the crackdown will change habits. One neighbour suggested people would smoke regardless of whether the products were legal, arguing it might be better to legalise and tax them. The city's response is that the absence of any tax collection is precisely the problem it is trying to fix, and the enforcement effort shows no sign of easing.
