Friday, December 20, 2013

The E-Cigarette Game

By Jay Galletly
  
Like it or not, if you use e-cigarettes or other vaping products , the government at the local and state level is intent on playing games with you.  This despite the fact that in a recent Reason-Rupe poll, 62% of Americans stated that the government should allow people to use tobacco-free e-cigarettes in public, while only 34% thought the government should prohibit this activity. http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/19/62-percent-think-e-cigarette-use-in-publ
  

Apparently the City Council of New York City didn’t look at this poll.  Or, if they did they decided to ignore it, since they and Mayor Michael Bloomberg are trying to wrap e-cigs into the city’s existing Smoke-Free Air Act.   If the bill passes, vaping would be treated the same as smoking tobacco products.  This means they would be prohibited at public and private venues, including beaches, parks, restaurants and office buildings.  While the “vote” is considered a mere formality, Bloomberg’s detractors are lining up to oppose the measure, citing that he is trying to turn America’s largest city into a virtual Nanny State.

In a quote from a blog by CBS News, New York City Health Commissioner Thomas Farley, stated, "While more research is needed on electronic cigarettes, waiting to act could jeopardize the progress we have made over the last few years"

Of course, that doesn’t mean that everyone is in agreement with this statement.  In the same blog, Richard Carmona, a former U.S. Surgeon General, sent a letter to the council recently to urge rejection of the bill.
"I'm extremely concerned that a well-intentioned but scientifically unsupported effort like the current proposal to include electronic cigarettes in New York's current smoking ban, could constitute a giant step backward in the effort to defeat tobacco smoking,"

Michael Bloomberg was affiliated with Salomon ...
Michael Bloomberg was affiliated with Salomon Brothers before launching his own firm Bloomberg News and later becoming mayor. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Carmona isn’t alone in his assertion that far from protecting the public, by adopting a knee jerk attitude toward vaping, public health may in fact be compromised.  Denied any alternative to tobacco cigarettes, cigars and pipes, this leaves those who still do smoke with little alternative to tobacco products. 

While the federal government has yet to impose restrictions on vaping, it seems that practically every day another city or state is clamoring to impose restrictions on where, when and if e-cigarettes and other vaping devices may be used.  On the local level, Chicago and LA are considering implementing bans such as those being proposed in the Big Apple.  Already a number of states, including New Jersey, North Dakota and Utah already ban e-cigs outright in bars and restaurants.   Other states have decided to try and cash in by imposing heavy taxation on vaping products. 

Currently Minnesota is the only state that imposes a tax on e-cigarettes.  (A 95% tax at that.)  Other states, such as Hawaii, Oklahoma, and Utah have tried to impose taxes on e-cigs, but have so far failed to pass the necessary legislation.  That doesn’t mean that other states aren’t lining up to try to impose heavy taxes on e-cigs and other vaping products.  Many, like South Carolina and Oregon have already started to look toward the fledgling vaping industry as a potential source of revenue.

In a blog from Time magazine, entitled Regulating E-Cigarettes Could have unintended Consequences, State and city regulations are likely to see major push-back from the electronic cigarette industry and e-cigarette smokers, many of whom believe that electronic cigarettes have helped them quit smoking. “If states get this wrong, if they [incorrectly] tax electronic cigarettes, you are going to see a lot of litigation” from e-cigarette companies, says Christian Berkey, CEO and founder of Johnson Creek in Wisconsin, the largest producer of the liquid used in electronic cigarettes. Berkey says that electronic cigarettes have not produced any proven public health costs that justify taxing them the way regular cigarettes are taxed.”

Electronic Cigarettes: RegulatingCould Have Unintended Consequences | TIME.com http://nation.time.com/2013/12/16/regulating-e-cigarettes-could-have-unintended-consequences/#ixzz2nx3va7Ww

While the final score in the E-Cigarette Game is anything but certain, it is a sure bet that unless the vaping public gets off the bench and into the game, the powers that be at the city and state government level are out to do anything but level the playing field.  In the meantime, it’s up to the vaping public and a handful of grassroots protesters to lobby for the right to use these products without being endlessly hassled.  Otherwise, the only kind of game that e-cigarette users are likely to see in the not-too-distant future is a never ending game of political football.

Jay Galletly is the CEO and one of the founders of VIAe e-cigarette company in North Carolina. He is one of the pioneers of the industry and was instrumental in the growth and success of other e-cigarette companies before starting VIAe.
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Friday, December 6, 2013

E-Cigs Cleared for Takeoff at a Number of US Airports

By Jay Galletly

Chesterfield cigarettes ...  ELECTRONIC CIGARE...

Don’t panic if you see a passenger puffing away as you make your way between the gates at Las Vegas’ McCarran Airport.  While traditional tobacco products such as cigarettes, cigars and pipes are forbidden by law at every airport in the US, e-cigarettes currently are not.  While you're  not allowed to use e-cigs on planes, e-cigs are allowed in a number of airports across the country, including Phoenix Sky Harbor, Miami International, Tampa International, Minneapolis St. Paul, and even Ronald Reagan National Airport in Washington DC. 

The FDA has not Wade in Yet

As far as the FDA is concerned, e-cigarettes are still not on their radar screen.  Therefore it has been left to the management at airports across the country to decide whether or not to allow e-cigarettes to be smoked on the premises.  This legal grey area has led to a number of different rules at airports. While  some allow e-cigarette smokers to puff away just about anywhere, while others restrict smoking to designated areas.

It’s a Go in Some Airports!

Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Arl...
Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport,
Arlington County, Virginia (near Washington, D. C.)
(Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Some airports, such as Philadelphia International and LAX forbid smoking of e-cigarettes anywhere on the property, others like New York’s LaGuardia and JFK airports permit e-cigarette us e in some terminals but not in others.   Currently the State of New York does not have any laws in place restricting the use of vaping products indoors, preferring to let individual business owners the freedom of choice to decide whether or not to permit e-cigs.  

According to an article in USA Today, “New York City and Chicago are considering laws to ban e-cigarette use in public spaces, treating the device the same as tobacco cigarettes. If the measure passes in New York that means e-cigarette use will no longer be allowed in any of the airports' public spaces.  The New York Port Authority oversees the airports and bans e-cigarette use in the terminals it operates, but it leases some terminals to airlines and private companies, which can have their own policies on e-cigarette use.”

No FDA Reg’s Yet!

Currently the FDA doesn’t have any regulations on the books restricting e-cigarette use. In fact the entire rationale behind banning cigarettes in restaurants, airports and other public places was 
FDA's War on Electronic Cigarettes
FDA's War on Electronic Cigarettes (Photo credit: lindsay-fox)
to protect non-smokers from the dangers of second hand smoke.  Many public officials are reacting in a knee jerk fashion to recommend that e-cigs be treated like the real McCoy and ban their use in public. Yet even New York City health commissioner, Dr. Thomas A. Farley, admitted in a Forbes magazine interview that he could not say whether or not e-cigarettes were hazardous to the health of those smoking them, let alone whether or not they produce hazardous second hand smoke.  Yet in the next breath, he states, "These things are really exploding around the world. We will have more information in the future," Farley said. "I think the question for the committee today is, do you want to wait?"

Real Scientist get it Right!

But that doesn’t mean that everyone in the scientific community agrees with him.  In fact, Dr. Gilbert Ross of the American Council on Sciences and Health publicly stated that any law restricting the use of e-cigarettes and other vaping devices without due scientific scrutiny are both unnecessary and hyper-regulatory.   "It really will accomplish nothing except to make more former smokers return to actual toxic cigarettes."

For now the rules governing e-cigarette smoking in airports and other public places are arbitrary and highly politicized.  Yet in other countries such as Great Britain vaping is permitted in regulated airp
The FDA Drug Decision Panel
The FDA Drug Decision Panel (Photo credit: DES Daughter)
ort zones, such as Heathrow Terminal 4.  In a survey of 1,000 airline travelers by global travel site Skyscanner, 57 percent of people surveyed responded that they would not object to airports designating “vaping areas” for e-cigarette users.  When you consider that an estimated 1.3 million people in this country are known consumers of e-cigarettes, you would think that politicians would realize that they vote too. 
In this article, I have covered how a lack of FDA rules and regulations has led to a wide array of rule in airports across the US and around the world. Currently many airports in the US both allow and restrict ecigarette usage. Most of the ban usage is not based on any scientific findings, rather they are based on knee jerk or political posturing by trying to lump ecigarettes vapors in with the negative side effects of second hand smoke. If you felt that this article was helpful, share it with a friend. If you have something to add, enter it in the comment section below. Thanks for sharing this time with me. Until next time, enjoy a new way with VIAe.
Jay Galletly is the CEO and one of the founders of VIAe ecigarette company in North Caroline. He is one of the pioneers of the industry and was instrumental in the growth and success of other ecigarette companies before starting VIAe.
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