CASAA Call to Action for Michigan updated!

Status
Not open for further replies.

JustJulie

CASAA
Supporting Member
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Jan 30, 2009
2,848
1,393
Des Moines, IA

Bill Godshall

Executive Director<br/> Smokefree Pennsylvania
ECF Veteran
Apr 2, 2009
5,171
13,288
66
Jeff Stier sent the following letter to MI Gov. Rick Snyder.


January 7, 2015

The Honorable Rick Snyder
Office of the Governor
P.O. Box 30013
Lansing, Michigan 48909


Dear Governor Snyder,

I’m writing to share with you my perspective on the legislation banning the sales of e-cigarettes to minors, which awaits your signature.

As a long-time anti-smoking policy expert, I have studied the issue of tobacco harm reduction at the city, state, and federal level.

Failing to sign this legislation would leave Michigan as one of the few remaining states that allow the sale of e-cigarettes to minors.

By definition, no reputable retailer sells e-cigarettes to minors, even without this legislation on the books. However, like in any field, there are unscrupulous actors. This legislation would properly make their actions illegal, and send a clear message that these products, which are meant for adult smokers, are not for minors.

There is a nearly universal consensus that there should be a ban on sales of e-cigarettes to minors. However, groups who seek your trust have been advising you not to sign the bills. Instead, they seek to keep the sale of e-cigarettes to minors legal, until they are able to pass legislation that rushes to treat e-cigarettes exactly like combustible cigarettes. However for this, there is little support in the scientific community.

In fact, treating e-cigarettes like cigarettes would undermine a central tenet of the U.S. FDA’s approach to securing the potentials benefit of e-cigarettes, while minimizing any potential harm.

As the FDA’s chief tobacco regulator, Mitch Zeller told the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s “New Public Health,” Regulating Tobacco: Q&A with FDA's Mitch Zeller - Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

The other example is if at the end of the day people are smoking for the nicotine, but dying from the tar, then there’s an opportunity for FDA to come up with what I’ve been calling a comprehensive nicotine regulatory policy that is agency-wide and that is keyed to something that we call the continuum of risk: that there are different nicotine containing and nicotine delivering products that pose different levels of risk to the individual.

Right now the overwhelming majority of people seeking nicotine are getting it from the deadliest and most toxic delivery system, and that’s the conventional cigarette. But if there is a continuum of risk and there are less harmful ways to get nicotine, and FDA is in the business of regulating virtually all of those products, then I think there’s an extraordinary public health opportunity for the agency to embrace some of these principles and to figure out how to incorporate it into regulatory policies.

Certainly, regulatory approaches to e-cigarettes, beyond those already underway at the Food and Drug Administration will need to take into account what Mr. Zeller and others refer to as the “continuum of risk” among different products. Failure to do so risks unintended consequences that include discouraging smokers from switching to significantly less harmful products such as e-cigarettes.

Those who encourage you not to sign the ban on e-cigarette sales to minors are seeking a range of potentially harmful regulations. Yet those proposals deserve individual consideration on their merits, taking into account the best science available. Those approaches do not deserve any halo from the consensus of banning sales to minors. Conversely, a ban on sales to minors should not be delayed because some groups seek to advance approaches that aren’t supported by science and may undermine public health.

In the meantime, you should act today to remove Michigan’s name from the quickly shrinking list of states which still legally permit the sale of e-cigarettes to minors.

Sincerely,



Jeff Stier
Senior Fellow, National Center for Public Policy Research
———————————————————————————————————————
Jeff Stier
Senior Fellow, National Center for Public Policy Research
Director, Risk Analysis Division
Twitter: @JeffAStier
Phone: 646-245-1443
 

Kent C

ECF Guru
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Jun 12, 2009
26,547
60,050
NW Ohio US
Unless this is an attempt to stop more drastic legislation, it's a waste of time, effort and money to ask for any gov't regulation - esp. one that has little to no opposition and will pass anyway.

Since any 'penalties' will not be on the kids or their parents but on vendors perhaps through sting operations that send kids into their stores, there are so many other CTA's that are more deserving of attention and effort.
 

Kent C

ECF Guru
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Jun 12, 2009
26,547
60,050
NW Ohio US
That's exactly what this is . . . which is why the ANTZ are shouting at the governor not to sign the bill--because they want more drastic legislation. :(

Ok :) A bit further search found this:


Outman seeks to ban sale of e-cigarettes to minors in Michigan

"Dr. Matthew Davis, chief medical executive of the Michigan Department of Community Health, said at a policy briefing earlier this month that he wants e-cigarettes to be treated no differently than standard cigarettes and other tobacco products.

Davis said he believes a more appropriate way to protect public health, specially for youth, is to classify e-cigarettes as tobacco products, which would put the products into a broader regulation. Davis added that the current legislation creates a separate classification for e-cigarettes, which would protect the products from “a lot of other regulations that tobacco products are currently subject to.”"
 

DrMA

Ultra Member
ECF Veteran
Jan 26, 2013
2,989
9,887
Seattle area
Status
Not open for further replies.

Users who are viewing this thread