Times Colonist

Treat pot, vaping the same: Island MD

- BILL CLEVERLEY bcleverley@timescolon­ist.com

Vaping and cannabis should be treated the same as tobacco under the capita region’s clean air bylaw, says Island chief medical health officer Dr. Richard Stanwick.

Stanwick is recommendi­ng the bylaw be amended to prohibit burning or vaping of any substances in any public space covered by the bylaw.

That would prohibit people from vaping or smoking pot in all those areas where smoking tobacco is prohibited, including in workspaces, within seven metres of doorways, windows or air intakes, at bus stops, or in public squares or in parks or at playground­s.

Stanwick will pitch the idea to the Capital Regional District’s planning and protective services committee on Wednesday.

The change would follow similar steps taken by other local government­s, including Vancouver, Maple Ridge, Chilliwack, Williams Lake, and Kelowna, CRD staff say.

The bylaw amendment would simplify enforcemen­t as enforcemen­t officers would no longer need to determine which substance is being burned or vaped prior to issuing a warning or ticket, CRD staff say.

Rina Goth, owner of E-Clectic Vape in Victoria, hadn’t heard of the proposals when contacted by the Times Colonist.

She didn’t see the need, saying that “vape” is not the same as second-hand smoke.

“When you’re vaping it’s just a water vapour that’s expelled. It looks like it’s smoke but it’s just a water vapour,” she said. “It doesn’t cling to your clothes. You can’t inhale it. You can’t get secondhand vape from it. There’s no noxious chemicals. It just disappears real quick.”

Goth said many people use vaping to quit tobacco products.

“I’ve even had people that smoked two packs of cigarettes a day. They purchased their vaping equipment and now they’re completely off the vaping and the smoking.”

Premier John Horgan said in December that marijuana smokers in B.C. would likely have to abide by the same public smoking rules as tobacco when cannabis becomes legal, which is expected to happen this summer.

British Columbia’s Tobacco and Vapour Products Control Act sets a six-metre smoke-free buffer zone around doorways, air intakes and open windows to public spaces and workplaces.

Stores, offices, and entrances to apartment buildings are considered public spaces or workplaces under the act, which also includes work vehicles, public transit, taxis, cafes, casinos and pubs and bars.

It’s been three years since the CRD expanded the bylaw to make it illegal to light a cigarette at any park, playing field, bus stop, beach or public square in the capital region.

The bylaw extended the nosmoking zones around doorways, windows, air intakes and bus shelters to seven metres from three metres.

Stanwick has said marijuana smoke contains 33 of the same carcinogen­s that are in tobacco smoke.

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 ?? TIMES COLONIST FILE ?? Marijuana fans celebrate April 20, also known as “4:20,” in Centennial Square in 2015. The Island’s chief medical health officer suggests that pot and vaping should be treated in the same way as tobacco under the region’s clean-air bylaw.
TIMES COLONIST FILE Marijuana fans celebrate April 20, also known as “4:20,” in Centennial Square in 2015. The Island’s chief medical health officer suggests that pot and vaping should be treated in the same way as tobacco under the region’s clean-air bylaw.

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