Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Judge blocks Michigan’s e-cigarette ban, citing use by adults

- DAVID EGGERT

LANSING, Mich. — A Michigan judge temporaril­y blocked the state’s weeks-old ban on flavored e-cigarettes Tuesday, saying it may force adults to return to smoking more harmful tobacco products and has irreparabl­y hurt vaping businesses.

Court of Claims Judge Cynthia Stephens put the prohibitio­n on hold until “further order of this court.”

The preliminar­y injunction is likely to be appealed by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, who ordered the creation of the emergency rules in a bid to combat the epidemic of teen vaping.

The judge said two businesses that sued showed a likelihood of prevailing on the merits of their contention that the rules are procedural­ly invalid because state officials did not justify short-cutting the normal rule-making process.

“Thus, and at this stage of the litigation, defendants have undercut their own assertions of an emergency by the fact that they demurred on taking action for nearly a year, and in the case of some informatio­n even longer than that, after they were in possession of the informatio­n cited in support of the emergency declaratio­n,” Stephens wrote.

She also said improved health outcomes for adults who switch to vaping products from combustibl­e tobacco “could, and likely would, be lost under the emergency rules.”

Several states have banned the sale of flavored vaping products amid a rising number of vaping-related lung illnesses and an epidemic of teen e-cigarette use. As of last week, vaping-related illnesses in the U.S. had reached about 1,300 cases in 49 states and one U.S. territory, including at least 26 deaths.

Most who got sick said they used products containing THC, the marijuana ingredient that causes a high, but some said they vaped only nicotine.

In New York, a state appeals court this month preliminar­ily blocked the state from enforcing a prohibitio­n on flavored e-cigarette sales.

The Michigan lawsuits, which were consolidat­ed, were filed by Houghton-based 906 Vapor and A Clean Cigarette, which has 15 locations across the state.

“We are pleased today that the court saw the ban of flavored vaping products for what it truly is: an overreach of government into the lives of adults,” said Andrea Bitely, spokeswoma­n for the Defend MI Rights Coalition, a vaping industry group. “We are ready to work through the normal legislativ­e process to arrive at a balanced solution that protects the rights of adults to use vaping products as an alternativ­e to combustibl­e cigarettes and at the same time get these products out of the children’s hands.”

Whitmer, a Democrat, has accused companies of using candy flavors and deceptive advertisin­g to “hook children on nicotine.”

The emergency rules prohibit the sale of flavored nicotine vaping products and the misleading marketing of e-cigarettes as “clean,” “safe,” “harmless” or “healthy.”

A message seeking comment was left with Whitmer’s office.

The federal government and states ban the sale of vaping products to minors, yet government survey figures show that last year, one in five U.S. high school students reported vaping in the previous month.

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