Vancouver Sun

Student vaping still on the rise, trustees say

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B.C. school trustees are asking for help to stop students from vaping.

Stephanie Higginson, president of the B.C. School Trustees Associatio­n, said Tuesday that her members report more students are vaping and school staff are spending more time policing the problem.

Members approved a motion at the associatio­n’s provincial council meeting urging federal and provincial government­s to make funding available for vape education and cessation for students, she said.

“Our schools are spending more time addressing, monitoring the oversight of this. So, it is a problem,” she said. “We have students using the vaping products in some extreme circumstan­ces, actually in the classroom, because (vaping) presents itself differentl­y than smoking.”

Higginson, who represents members on 60 provincial school boards, said trustees also want vaping product advertisem­ents, promotions and sponsorshi­ps to align with current tobacco legislatio­n.

Any solution should be part of a larger mental-health support strategy, she said.

“We know that kids who have access to mental-health supports are less likely to vape,” Higginson said.

The motion will be presented to B.C.’s ministries of health and education and to provincial health authoritie­s.

She said the Canadian School Board Associatio­n will also be advocating help from the federal government around student vaping.

“What we need is a more co-ordinated and communicat­ed effort to address this.”

The new physical education program includes a health component that would give schools an opportunit­y to educate about the dangers of vaping, if they’re provided with the proper resources from government, she said.

No one from the B.C. health or education ministries was immediatel­y available for comment.

Health Minister Adrian Dix said in September the province would act soon to combat the increase in teen vaping and e-cigarette use.

Health Canada said in a statement earlier this month that it was deeply concerned by the increase in vaping reported among Canadian youth. It said it has taken numerous steps to address the rise of vaping in Canada and, in particular, the risk that it poses to youth. Those steps include consulting on additional regulatory measures targeting promotion to youth, packaging and flavours, as well as compliance and enforcemen­t and public awareness and youth education campaigns.

The Ontario government recently announced the province would ban the promotion of vaping products in convenienc­e stores and gas stations starting Jan. 1.

The president of the Canadian Medical Associatio­n has called youth vaping a public health crisis.

Higginson said the unknown long-term health implicatio­ns of breathing in flavoured vaping ingredient­s are a concern.

 ?? DAX MELMER ?? B.C.’s School Trustees Associatio­n reports that more students are vaping and staff are spending more time policing the problem.
DAX MELMER B.C.’s School Trustees Associatio­n reports that more students are vaping and staff are spending more time policing the problem.

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