My concern with this is, who will challenge it in court? I'd like to know what Bill knows there. The biggest companies (with the money to sue) pretty much sell cig-a-likes, so will they challenge the things we are most concerned about? Will they care about unlimited flavors? Will they care about refill bottles? Will they care about higher nicotine strengths?
The larger companies will be more likely to have the resources to provide all of the "evidence" for substantial equivalency, because their pre-filled cartridges/flavors/strengths most closely resemble what was on the market before 2007. So, they'd only be likely to sue (obviously, this is just a guess) only if the FDA deems e-cigarettes to be regulated under the existing tobacco regulations and doesn't grandfather in ANY e-cigarettes. But if the FDA grandfathers in pre-2007 e-cigarettes, but otherwise regulates other products in such a way to severely limit the flavors, refill bottles and nicotine strengths that don't concern them, will they still bother to sue? Are there any companies that sell refill bottles (with many flavors and higher nicotine strengths) that have the wherewithal to sue the FDA?
I honestly wish folks would keep up with the reality of the legal framework of what the FDA can and can not do. I am simply saying abundant evidence that you are legally wrong all over the place, and Bill Godshall is legally wrong also. If folks don't believe you can be wrong on the legal front, so be it, but folks continue to extrapolate out, on a premise that is for lack of a better word... Wrong.
Instead of believing and hoping and guessing, everyone would be best to read what is being done. This is what is being done.
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/fo...ing-substantial-equivalence-requirements.html Please keep up to date.
Here is the exact lanugage of the proposed methods to determine Substantial Equivalence, and its a complete contradiction to the fear mongering. Speicifially it says that if you change a product and say why that change is made, and its a safe thing, there is a reasonable chance you will get a very easy passing grade. Facts kinda blow away FUD don't they?
An order under section 910 is not required, however, if a manufacturer
submits a report under section 905(j) of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C.
387e(j) demonstrating the new tobacco product's substantial equivalence
to an appropriate predicate product, and FDA issues an order finding
the new product to be substantially equivalent to the predicate product
and in compliance with the requirements of the FD&C Act.
FDA has established a pathway for manufacturers to request
exemptions from the substantial equivalence requirements of the FD&C
Act in Sec. 1107.1 (21 CFR 1107.1) of the Agency's regulations. As
described in Sec. 1107.1(a), FDA may exempt tobacco products that are
modified by adding or deleting a tobacco additive, or increasing or
decreasing the quantity of an existing tobacco additive, from the
requirement of demonstrating substantial equivalence if the Agency
determines that: (1) The modification would be a minor modification of
a tobacco product; (2) a report demonstrating substantial equivalence
is not necessary for the protection of public health; and (3) an
exemption is otherwise appropriate.
-------------We have people thinking that a Provari will be banned. But if you look at the language, you can see that, that the FDA is providing for, skipping the task for items that are simply known to be the same. The entire argument for V2 being allowed but BLU not being allowed, is obliterated.
Even the FDA does not agree with the ANY CHANGE theories of what CASAA is repeatedly professing.
Maybe now we have some proposals the dooms day preppers might not be complaining the Sky seems so much closer today, the entire thing could just fall on us.