Edmonton Journal

We can’t let legalized pot renormalis­e smoking

Research shows children imitate the actions of elders, Les Hagen writes.

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When smoking was prohibited in all indoor public places in Edmonton 13 years ago, I mistakenly thought that our work was done in protecting children and youth from public exposure to tobacco smoke.

The Edmonton indoor smoking ban was followed by indoor smoking bans in other cities and ultimately by the Alberta government, which implemente­d a provincewi­de ban in 2008.

Smoking bans have improved the quality of life for many Albertans, especially those with asthma, allergies, heart disease and other conditions that are aggravated by exposure to tobacco smoke.

However, indoor smoking bans do not solve the problem of modelling tobacco use to children in public places. Children and youth should not be exposed to harmful drug use in public places, especially if the goal is to protect kids from addiction, disease and premature death. At the very least, we should be working to reduce children’s exposure to harmful drug use in public.

To a five-year-old, smoking is smoking, whether it involves tobacco, cannabis, burning or vaping. Any product or device used for inhalation that emits billowing clouds can be easily mistaken for tobacco use — even by a well-trained eye.

Modelling is an essential element of childhood developmen­t. Behavioura­l science tells us that by modelling healthy behaviours to kids, we are more likely to produce healthy kids. This modelling extends to behaviours and activities that children witness in public settings and even in Hollywood films. When kids are involved, smoking and drug use is truly a matter of monkey-see, monkey-do. As a society, if we want to keep kids drugfree then we need to reduce their exposure to harmful drug use. The most harmful drug of all is tobacco. Tobacco kills and harms more Canadians than all other forms of substance abuse combined, including alcohol.

Cannabis legalizati­on has the potential to renormalis­e smoking and to undermine decades of progress in reducing and preventing tobacco use. Smoking bans are a cornerston­e of the overall effort to reduce tobacco use. As a society, we cannot afford to lose any ground on this enormous public-health achievemen­t or in our efforts to protect children and youth from harmful drug use.

For these reasons, Edmonton city council is on the right track by pursuing parallel restrictio­ns on the public smoking and vaping of tobacco and cannabis. These parallel restrictio­ns will increase the health effect of the bylaw, prevent the renormaliz­ation of tobacco use and simplify enforcemen­t.

Tobacco kills 55 times more Canadians than cannabis, according to recent data provided by the Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction. From a public-health perspectiv­e, any restrictio­ns placed on the smoking or vaping of cannabis can be easily justified for tobacco use. Tobacco regulation should not take a back seat to cannabis regulation.

We cannot allow cannabis legalizati­on to renormalis­e tobacco use, especially if the goal is to prevent harmful drug use among children and youth. It would be inexcusabl­e if the progress made in creating smoke-free places over the past four decades came to a screeching halt with cannabis legalizati­on.

Regarding enforcemen­t, it will be much easier for bylaw officers to determine whether people are smoking or vaping and much harder to determine what they are smoking or vaping. This distinctio­n is especially true with vaping since vape devices produce no distinguis­hing smell other than the added flavourant. It is almost impossible to determine if someone is vaping nicotine oil or cannabis oil. A cannabis user could easily escape detection in public places by simply claiming that they are vaping nicotine. We commend city council for pursuing parallel restrictio­ns on the public smoking and vaping of cannabis and tobacco. Edmonton youth deserve first-class protection from harmful drug use in all public places.

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