Call & Times

NY could add menthol to flavor ban as vaping groups sue

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ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — New York officials want to add menthol to the state’s first-in-the-nation ban on the sale of flavored e-cigarettes as the vaping industry seeks to block it, according to the governor’s office.

Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he’s directing his administra­tion to take steps to include menthol in a ban that currently excludes tobacco and menthol flavors. The state health commission­er could hold an emergency meeting as soon as next week to update the ban, according to Cuomo’s office.

The vaping industry’s trade group and two New York vaping companies aim to block the ban with a lawsuit filed Tuesday in state court.

Similar bans in New York, Michigan and Rhode Island come as health officials investigat­e severe breathing illnesses linked to vaping. Cuomo proposed the emergency ban citing surging use among young people.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says more than 500 confirmed and probable cases of lung illnesses and nine deaths nationwide have been attributed to vaping.

The CDC has not identified a common product or ingredient responsibl­e for the illnesses. Many patients reported vaping THC from marijuana, though health officials have cautioned that some said they only vaped nicotine.

New York’s prohibitio­n covers flavored e-cigarettes and other vaping products except for menthol and tobacco flavors. Retailers also face a looming deadline to remove merchandis­e from store shelves.

The executive director of the Vapor Technology Associatio­n, which represents manufactur­ers, wholesaler­s and retailers of vaping products, said New York’s ban unfairly targets former smokers who say they rely on flavors while failing to address marketing to youth.

“Bans are prohibitio­ns and they lead to people reverting to smoking or a black market,” Executive Director Tony Abboud said. “But an actual policy discussion about limiting marketing is something we’ve been trying to have with regulators and laid out a plan for.”

Abboud said instead of banning flavors, his group would support banning the use of kid-friendly names and marketing for tobacco flavors.

The Associated Press has reported that proponents of vaping, including tobacco companies and the Vapor Technology Associatio­n, have spent tens of thousands of dollars to successful­ly fight proposed flavor bans in state legislatur­es this year. Convenienc­e store owners who say flavored e-cigarettes bring in customers have also opposed such efforts.

The vaping industry’s trade group is now prepared to go to court to fight flavor bans announced by governors in other states, Abboud said. In Michigan, the owner of a vape shop sued Wednesday to halt that state’s ban on flavored e-cigarettes.

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