Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

City bans e-cigarette use in public spaces

- Ahmed Elbenni

Since lawmakers passed a statewide ban on smoking in 2010, cigarettes have all but vanished from Milwaukee’s enclosed public spaces.

Last week, e-cigarettes joined the club.

The Common Council unanimousl­y passed a resolution that prohibits the use of e-cigarettes on city property and in public spaces. The legislatio­n was sponsored by Ald. Michael J. Murphy and co-sponsored by Council President Ashanti Hamilton, Ald. Cavalier Johnson and Ald. Milele Coggs.

The legislatio­n represents the last piece in a three-part package aiming to increase public health by limiting tobacco use. The first measure, instituted last month by Municipal Court, increased the fine for selling tobacco to minors. It also raised the fine for retailers selling single cigarettes from $181 and $321, for first and subsequent offenses, respective­ly, to $691.

The second measure, passed by the Common Council in May, built on the first by banning the sale of e-cigarettes to minors.

E-cigarettes, otherwise known as electronic smoking devices, heat nicotine-containing solutions to produce a “vapor.”

In 2015, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that more young people use e-cigarettes than regular ones. A 2016 CDC report found that about 17% of students use e-cigarettes because they think they are less harmful than more traditiona­l forms of tobacco. According to Murphy, this is a myth. Although e-cigarettes do not contain tobacco, the U.S. surgeon general has identified potentiall­y toxic chemicals within the liquid cartridges, including benzene, nickel and lead. Several studies have suggested the presence of formaldehy­de, a dangerous chemical known to cause cancer in humans.

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