I think I commented on this thread over a year ago somewhere or another, but I have something to add. It's been mentioned that oversight of e-liquid production might not necessarily be viewed as a bad thing, considering that mistakes can happen in production, simple neglect or cutting corners for higher profit margins, or safety quality standards could drop. I get all of that. The problem is, I'm a bit pessimistic in anything that a government entity becomes entangled with. Along with the ulterior reasoning and motives for any such regulation, there's also the factor of a government screwing up anything that it touches.
I implore those who view ANY regulation of this market "maybe not a bad thing" to consider two key points -
1.) Up to this point, there has been not one case that I know of (there may be a couple or many - I will admit that I do not know) where someone has received a e-liquid product that was too strong or toxic in some way. It could have occurred that someone was allergic to an ingredient or base (VG or PG), but no regulations would have stopped that anyway. ANY regulations would be most harmful to the small liquid manufacturers that are in a nickel and dime business to begin with. Prices will skyrocket, and attention will be placed more on the health benefits of not smoking rather than saving money. (This is all good, but I like things the way that they are.) There's also a potential for 'black-market' items to find their way into the industry, muddying the quality of what's out there now.
2.) Regulations with anything have always started with good intentions, but once the regulators begin to see the dollar signs, every bureaucratic organization is diving to have their first hand in the pot. Once this happens, safety is the last thing on the list. To this day, regulations to any government entity just means one thing - taxation. Taxation = income. And don't think the big tobacco companies aren't in on it. Regulations on alcohol, smoking, vaping - it's never about safety or better health. It's all about bringing in more money. It's another avenue of taxation without representation. That's all it is. If a government cared about its people, cigarettes would have been outlawed a century ago. They were in on the racket right along with the big tobacco companies. They saw the dollar signs. Between all of the chemicals added to cigarettes to allow inhalation without irritation to the lawsuits brought forth by those who claimed to be misled, who's come out smelling peachy the whole time? The entity that's made money on both sides of the fence.
I prefer to be left alone. There is no law against using or possessing nicotine. Let the people handle it their way. We don't need regulations for every aspect of our lives. Micro managing is something that really irritates the hell out of me. Their already telling our power plants and other manufacturing facilities that the more pollution they produce, the more taxes they have to pay. (As if that does anything beneficial for the environment.) If you want to stop pollution, attack the problem and try and find ways to help change the situation. Don't just try to collect on it, while allowing the damage to continue anyway.
And I'm sorry this turned into a rant, but all of this stuff really rubs me the wrong way. The most aggravating part about all of it is that a lot of people don't even think about it or realize it. Or they do and don't say anything.