Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario Bans Vaping In Places Where Smoking Tobacco Is Prohibited

The Canadian Press, 10 Mar, 2016 11:33 AM
    TORONTO — Ontario is banning e-cigarette and medical marijuana users from smoking or vaporizing anywhere regular cigarettes are prohibited.
     
    Premier Kathleen Wynne said the move is common sense.
     
    "We have made a determination that smoking, whatever it is — whether it's vaping, whether it's medical marijuana, whether it's cigarettes — that there should be restrictions on that," she said Thursday. "And so the rules will apply to marijuana, to medical marijuana, to vaping as they do to cigarettes."
     
    The new rules come months after the Liberal government backtracked on electronic cigarette regulations just one day after an exemption for medical marijuana users came to light.
     
    The e-cigarette rules were supposed to come into effect Jan. 1 to ban their use in enclosed public places, workplaces and certain outdoor areas.
     
    But after the public learned of a medical marijuana exemption and that it meant users could vaporize in restaurants, at work or on playgrounds, the government put the rules on hold and went back to the drawing board.
     
    Associate Health Minister Dipika Damerla said last fall that it was too early to tell whether or not the original exemption was a failure.
     
     
    Jonathan Zaid, the founder of Canadians for Fair Access to Medical Marijuana, had applauded the original exemption, saying users need their medication to live a better quality of life.
     
    He said Thursday he is disappointed the government has reversed its position.
     
    "I thought the government was willing to work with medical cannabis users to create a regulation and an exemption that works for both the public health and public safety and medical marijuana users, but it seems like this backtrack has kind of made it fully inaccessible for people to use their medicine, which I believe is against their human rights."
     
    The new regulations, which are posted for consultation, expand the definition of e-cigarette to include "e-substance," expand the list of places where e-cigarettes cannot be sold and set out rules for their display and promotion.
     
    On Jan. 1 it became illegal to sell or supply e-cigarettes to anyone under 19, but the new regulations allow parents or guardians to supply them to minors for medical marijuana purposes.
     
    A vaporizer is defined as an electronic cigarette or other device that contains a power source and heating element that's designed to heat a substance to produce a vapour to be inhaled through the mouth.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Trade Minister Chrystia Freeland Says Renegotiation Of Pacific Trade Deal Not Possible

    Trade Minister Chrystia Freeland Says Renegotiation Of Pacific Trade Deal Not Possible
    Freeland said the treaty negotiated by the Harper government during the election campaign is very complicated, involving 12 countries along the Pacific Rim that make up 40 per cent of the global economy.

    Trade Minister Chrystia Freeland Says Renegotiation Of Pacific Trade Deal Not Possible

    Toronto Stock Exchange Begins Friday With Another Big Drop, Loonie Weak

    Toronto Stock Exchange Begins Friday With Another Big Drop, Loonie Weak
    TORONTO — Canada's biggest stock market, the loonie and crude oil futures were down Friday morning but above their early lows.

    Toronto Stock Exchange Begins Friday With Another Big Drop, Loonie Weak

    Saskatchewan Mother Says Christian Prayer Doesn't Belong In Public Schools

    Saskatchewan Mother Says Christian Prayer Doesn't Belong In Public Schools
    Dusti Hennenfent says she's upset the prayer is recited each morning at Moose Jaw's Lindale Elementary School, where her two children attend classes.

    Saskatchewan Mother Says Christian Prayer Doesn't Belong In Public Schools

    Passenger Advocate Concerned Over New Low-Cost Airline's Lack Of Licence

    Passenger Advocate Concerned Over New Low-Cost Airline's Lack Of Licence
    Halifax-based Gabor Lukacs says people should be alarmed that it's an unlicensed company, saying that leaves passengers with a financial risk.

    Passenger Advocate Concerned Over New Low-Cost Airline's Lack Of Licence

    'He's A Harmless Child:' Family Shocked After Boy Attacked, Left In Dumpster

    'He's A Harmless Child:' Family Shocked After Boy Attacked, Left In Dumpster
    It wasn't until the next day that Morrissette found out his intellectually disabled boy, Jean-Micheal, had been found in a Winnipeg garbage bin as temperatures dipped to -15 C.

    'He's A Harmless Child:' Family Shocked After Boy Attacked, Left In Dumpster

    'Diligent' Review Expected Of Inquest Findings On Saskatchewan Inmate's Death

    'Diligent' Review Expected Of Inquest Findings On Saskatchewan Inmate's Death
    Jeff Campbell, a department spokesman, says officials will respond once they've done a full review of the recommendations brought back by a coroner's jury in the case of Andy Allan Brassard.

    'Diligent' Review Expected Of Inquest Findings On Saskatchewan Inmate's Death