Plan to ban e-cigarettes sales to minors reignites Michigan vaping debate

Posted by freemexy on May 27th, 2019

The Michigan Senate on Tuesday unanimously approved legislation that would ban the sale of Ecig Wholesale to minors, the latest step in a years-long battle over state regulations for the increasingly popular vaping devices.

The federal Food and Drug Administration began treating e-cigarettes like tobacco in 2016, prohibiting sales to anyone under the age of 18. But experts say the lack of state penalties has limited enforcement and contributed to growing use by minors here.

Michigan is now the only state without its own ban on e-cigarette sales to minors, according to lawmakers who have been unable to finalize consensus regulations in recent years.Gretchen Whitmer's administration has voiced early opposition to the latest effort because it would exclude alternative nicotine products, including e-cigarettes, from the traditional definition of a tobacco product in Michigan law.

Former Gov. Rick Snyder vetoed similar legislation on the same grounds in 2015 amid a debate over applying tobacco taxes to e-cigarettes. Health advocacy organizations argue the latest proposal is again more about "protecting tobacco company profits" than it is about protecting kids.

Sponsoring Sen. Rick Outman, R-Six Lakes, said he is hoping Whitmer will sign the bill if it is also approved by the House and reaches her desk. After all, he said, as a state senator she voted for the legislation Snyder vetoed in 2014.

“There are certain groups that are just bound and determined to classify a utensil as a tobacco product,” said Outman, referencing Electronic Cigarette Wholesale devices that are traditionally loaded with liquid nicotine.

“I find that odd because … it may not contain any tobacco,” he said. “I don’t care if (minors) put marijuana in it, I don’t care if they put bubble gum in it. I don’t want them to have access to this device, and that’s what this legislation does.”

Whitmer’s health department objected to the proposal last month in the Senate Regulatory Reform Committee.

The administration “strongly supports legislative efforts to restrict all forms of tobacco or nicotine products” but opposes the new legislation because it would prohibit e-cigarettes “from being regulated as tobacco products under Michigan law,” state health consultant Farid Shamo told lawmakers in committee last month.

Passing a state law that is not consistent with FDA guidelines “will unnecessarily sow confusion and will send a mixed health message to the public that these products are less harmful or even safe,” Shamo said in written testimony.u2022eney7485yyWEEEEDD

Like it? Share it!


freemexy

About the Author

freemexy
Joined: December 6th, 2018
Articles Posted: 2,579

More by this author