This doesn't seem so bad to me.
Wouldn't it be worse if they determined e-cigs to be a tobacco equivalent? In that case, you would no longer be able to buy online and the market we know of would disappear.
The whole report seems to give reasons why e-cigs are different from tobacco and thus why the FDA need to treat them differently.
No, the original post is not about electronic cigarettes, it is about how the FDA has been responding to applications for products claiming substantial equivalence...
The FSPTCA gave the FDA the authority to regulate tobacco products.
Part of those regulations have to do with what a company has to do in order to introduce a new tobacco product.
New tobacco products are defined as being introduced after February 15, 2007 and products on the market prior to that are grandfathered in.
New tobacco products, however, can escape the new requirements by showing that they are substantially equivalent to a product on the market prior to that date.
If and when the FDA decides that electronic cigarettes are tobacco products, electronic cigarettes will be subject to the new regulations.
At that point each electronic cigarette product will be considered a new tobacco product unless it was marketed in the United States prior to the 2007 date.
Anything introduced after that date will have to show substantial equivalence.
The original post outlines various reasons why the FDA has been denying substantial equivalence claims for new tobacco products currently covered by the FSPTCA.
The FSPTCA currently covers cigarettes and smokeless tobacco, but that will be expanded to other tobacco products when the FDA gets around to it.
That is what the "deeming regulations" you keep hearing about are are all about.