Altria Group 2023 WHEREAS: we believe in full transparency of the effectiveness of Altria’s commitment to prevent underage use of nicotine products[1] and its commitment to racial equity[2] so we can determine if they adequately address potential legal, financial, and reputational business risks. RESOLVED: Shareholders of Altria, Inc. (“Altria”) request that the Board of Directors commission a third-party civil rights equity audit to review its corporate policies, practices, products and services, above legal and regulatory matters; to assess the impact of the Company’s policies, practices, products and services on BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and people of color) and Latinx/a/o/e communities, including youth. Input from civil rights organizations, employees, customers, and communities in which Altria operates and other stakeholders should be considered. A report on the audit, prepared at reasonable cost and omitting confidential or proprietary information, should be publicly disclosed on Altria’s website. SUPPORTING STATEMENT: Altria notes “increases in youth usage of e-vapor have threatened to undermine the hard-fought gains made in preventing underage use.”[3] As age is a protected class in the US constitution, a civil rights audit should include impacts on children and youth. In December 2018, Altria invested $12.8 billion in JUUL, taking a 35% stake in the company, and providing advertising and sales support. JUUL currently commands three-quarters of the e-cigarette market. Data from the Centers for Disease Control shows that 86.3% of middle and high school students had been exposed to tobacco product advertisements or promotions, and 27.5% of high schoolers reported current e-cigarette use in 2019. Additionally, an estimated 53.3% of high school students and 24.3% of middle school students reported having ever tried a tobacco product.[4] A multi-state coalition of Attorneys General is investigating JUUL’s marketing and sales practices to underage users. Altria shares fell as much as 2.7% after Dow Jones reported the FTC is investigating the marketing practices of JUULLabs. Tobacco/nicotine companies have historically placed larger amounts of advertising[5] in African American publications, disproportionally exposing African Americans to more cigarette ads than Whites. Additionally, tobacco companies use price promotions such as discounts and multi-pack coupons—which are most often used by African Americans and other minority groups, women, and young people— to increase sales.[6]