Tobacco or no-go: N.W.T. to ban most flavoured vapes
CBC
The N.W.T. is on track to ban most flavoured vape products in the territory starting this March.
Advocates say this will help keep kids from getting addicted to nicotine but people working in the industry say their sales are already highly regulated to keep their products away from children, and the new law might force them to close for good.
Under the territorial government's proposed amendment to the Tobacco and Vapour Products Control Act, only flavourless or tobacco-flavoured vape products would be allowed to be sold in the N.W.T.
Currently, vape products can come in all sorts of flavours including mango, pineapple, cotton candy and banana bread.
Rob Cunningham, senior policy analyst with the Canadian Cancer Society, said the variety of attractive vape flavours on the market has contributed to a serious problem.
"A really important factor contributing to so many youth vaping is the widespread availability of fruit and candy and other flavours," he said. "We've made such progress in reducing youth smoking, and we do not need a new generation of youth to be addicted to nicotine — but that's exactly what's happening through e-cigarettes."
Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and P.E.I. have already banned vaping flavours other than tobacco, while Ontario and British Columbia have restricted where various flavours can be sold.
According to the 2017 Canadian Tobacco, Alcohol and Drugs survey administered by Health Canada, 15 per cent of Canadians had tried a vaping product, and youth and young adults had the highest rate of trying vaping.
As of 2018, the N.W.T. Bureau of Statistics found that 33 per cent of N.W.T. residents between 15 and 24 years old had tried vaping at least once, and one out of every five N.W.T. residents who had tried vaping did so because they liked the flavours.
For Cunningham, banning all flavours except tobacco is a compromise that he thinks would keep vapes accessible to adults who want to use them — including people who vape as part of quitting smoking — while making them much less attractive to young people.
"Allowing e-cigarettes to continue to be sold in tobacco flavour and also unflavoured varieties is a way that e-cigarettes can still be on the market, and protects youth at the same time," he said.
Austin Robertson and his brother started their vape business, VapouRevolution, in 2014. They now own 11 stores throughout Canada.
He said if the territorial government's law comes into effect as written, they will have to close their Yellowknife location.
"Our business will shut down effectively overnight if this passes," he said. "We have data proving that 99 per cent of our sales are based on flavoured e-liquid — and those are all to adults."
Niagara Health to disburse $20M in pay equity deal for thousands of current, former hospital workers
Niagara Health will pay out thousands of hospital workers a total of $20 million after striking a decades-in-the-making agreement with the union.