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New Jersey Could Ban Flavored E-Cigarettes

Rerolled from a High Times Original Article


TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — Candy, cocoa and chocolate, as well as any other flavor of e-cigarette, are among the flavors New Jersey lawmakers sought to prohibit on Thursday, along with a separate ban on menthol-flavored traditional cigarettes.

New Jersey’s Democrat-led Assembly and
Senate health committees advanced the legislation after several hours of
testimony that drew crowds of supporters and opponents to the
statehouse annex.

Supporters of the flavor ban say it hooks kids on nicotine. Opponents worry the ban would lead to a black market and could also hurt some businesses in the state.

Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy supports banning e-cigarette flavors since a commission he established to come up with the state’s response to nationwide vaping-related outbreak recommended the prohibition last month.

His office declined to comment on the menthol cigarette ban.

That measure sparked some heated rhetoric from one lawmaker in particular.

Democratic
state Sen. Ronald Rice, of Newark, chairs the Legislative Black Caucus
and opposed the legislation. Rice pointed to the timing of the
prohibitions coming as the state is also considering legalizing
recreational marijuana, which he also opposes and says would likely harm
the black community because he says businesses would likely be
controlled by large, white-run companies.

“I’m an African-American. I’m a black legislator, and we continue to have folk in the Legislature and the governor tell us what’s doing harm to the black community,” Rice said. “We know what harms us as a people and a community.”

Lawmakers say they’re seeking to ban menthol
cigarettes in particular because they’ve been marketed to black
consumers for decades.

Senate health committee chairman Democratic
Sen. Joe Vitale says he agrees with Rice that it’s important for
lawmakers to understand the communities that legislation will affect.

“I’m
a middle-class white legislator. I can’t pretend to understand what
life is like in some of those underserved communities,” he said in a
phone interview.

The e-cigarette flavor ban goes back to 2016 but took on new urgency earlier this year when more than 2,000 Americans, many of them young people, have gotten sick this year from vaping. At least 40 people have died.

The cause of the outbreak was still a
mystery when Murphy’s panel recommended the flavor ban, but since then
federal health officials recently announced a breakthrough in
identifying the culprit.

Health officials reported that vitamin E acetate was found in vaping devices used by those who got sick. Most of them also used black market products containing THC, the ingredient that produces a high in marijuana.

By Mike Catalini

The post New Jersey Could Ban Flavored E-Cigarettes appeared first on High Times.


Rerolled from High Times