Anthony Haugen kicked his smoking habit five years ago. But a business opportunity lured him back, and he's now selling and puffing on the new smoking alternative: electronic cigarettes.
Haugen opened a shop two months ago in a Coon Rapids strip mall. It's one of a spate of e-cigarette sample rooms opening in Twin Cities suburbs.
"We've had very successful days," Haugen said. "There hasn't been a day where we haven't covered our expenses. On a busy day, we've seen 100 customers."
E-cigarettes are a rapidly growing industry nationally. Sales have doubled every year since 2008 and are projected to reach $1.7 billion this year.
In the Twin Cities, new shops are particularly prevalent in Anoka County, which has the highest concentration of smokers in the metro area. Five stores have opened in Blaine in the past six months; there are also three in Coon Rapids, two in Anoka, one in Ramsey and one in Fridley.
Elsewhere, Woodbury in the east metro, Hopkins in the west and Shakopee in the south all issued licenses for their first e-cig stores in September. Minneapolis city staffers estimate four or five shops in the city exclusively sell e-cigarettes. St. Paul city staffers say they know of three new e-cig stores.
Right now, the industry is largely unregulated at the state and federal levels, making it easy to get into the business. In most Minnesota cities, all you need is a license and storefront. With this year's steep increase in the state cigarette tax, the market for cheaper smoking alternatives is red hot, new shop owners say.
Also, the devices, which don't contain tobacco, don't fall under the state's clean-air act, meaning individual bars, restaurants and retailers set their own rules about people lighting up e-cigs. A handful of cities, including Duluth, have banned smoking them in public.