The Peterborough Examiner

Ontario to ban ads for vaping products

Promotions will be prohibited in convenienc­e stores and gas stations

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO — Ontario announced Friday it will ban the promotion of vaping products in convenienc­e stores and gas stations, a move critics said does not go far enough to protect the health of young people.

Health Minister Christine Elliott said she made the decision in response to new research that showed vaping is on the rise among youth in the province.

“That’s a big concern to me,” she said. “I know that is a big concern to parents and families, and I’m concerned about the potential health effects the increase in vaping has brought forward so we are starting with this prohibitio­n of advertisin­g.”

Elliott said the ban takes effect on Jan. 1, 2020. Ontario was set to ban the advertisin­g of vaping products in convenienc­e stores under the previous Liberal government but the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves paused regulation­s that were to come into effect on July 1, 2018, shortly after they took office.

The province’s change of direction Friday comes as health authoritie­s in Canada have begun to closely monitor reports of respirator­y illnesses potentiall­y linked to vaping. In the United States, health authoritie­s have reported 1,604 cases of vaping-related illnesses, including 34 deaths. No single ingredient, electronic cigarette or vaping device has been linked to all the illnesses in the U.S., but most who got sick said they vaped products containing THC, the high-inducing ingredient in marijuana.

Last month, Elliott issued a ministeria­l order to public hospitals to report vaping-related cases of severe pulmonary disease.

“My responsibi­lity is to ensure the health and safety of our young people, and that’s why we’re moving forward now with this ban,” she said.

The province will still allow vaping to be promoted in specialty stores and cannabis shops, which are open to people aged 19 and older.

The government will make the change by amending a provincial regulation to bring it in line with the current ban on in-store tobacco promotion.

Ontario now joins seven other Canadian provinces that have introduced similar restrictio­ns on vaping promotion.

A year ago, the Ontario Campaign for Action on Tobacco — which includes the Canadian Cancer Society and the Heart & Stroke Foundation — asked the

Ford government to ban display and advertisin­g of vaping products in thousands of convenienc­e stores across Ontario.

The groups said at the time that it would lead to increased nicotine addiction among teenagers, and on Friday its director applauded the move by the government.

“It’s pretty clear the government has looked at the evidence that has been published on youth vaping, on how it’s growing in Ontario since they legalized promotion in retail settings,” Michael Perley said. “The evidence says they need to do more to stop messaging to young people … that these products are normal and just like candy and pop that kids go into convenienc­e stores to look for.”

Perley praised the provincial ban as going further than current federal limits on advertisin­g to youth, which he describe as too subjective. But he said the Tories should limit the sale of the vaping products to the hundreds of specialty shops that already exist across the province and have the expertise to help adult smokers.

“Smokers will get much better advice there than in a convenienc­e store with lineups and clerks who have never been trained on this issue,” he said.

NDP health critic Frances Gélinas said the Tories should never have paused the previous government’s bill to prohibit the practice.

 ?? JIM WILSON NYT ?? New research shows vaping is increasing among youth, leading to fears a new generation will become addicted to nicotine.
JIM WILSON NYT New research shows vaping is increasing among youth, leading to fears a new generation will become addicted to nicotine.

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