Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Trudeau Liberals Plan To Regulate Vaping Products To Help Shield Young People

Darpan News Desk, 28 Sep, 2016 11:56 AM
    OTTAWA — The Liberal government says it plans to introduce legislation later this fall to regulate vaping.
     
    Health Canada offered few other details Tuesday beyond saying it would both protect young people from nicotine and allow adult smokers to use vaping as a quit-smoking aid or as a potentially less harmful alternative to tobacco.
     
    In a statement, the department said it is also renewing the federal tobacco control strategy for one year, giving the government time to develop a new long-term plan. The strategy was introduced in 2001 and last renewed four years ago.
     
    Health Minister Jane Philpott will host a national forum early next year to discuss the future of tobacco control.
     
    In an interview Tuesday, Philpott said Canadians will be pleased the federal government is proceeding with regulatory standards for e-cigarettes and vaping.
     
    "It is a challenging area because, for one thing, we are lacking adequate evidence to completely understand the risks and benefits of e-cigarettes," she said. "We acknowledge that one of the things that needs to be done is to increase the evidence."
     
    There are potential benefits and harms, she added.
     
    "We've seen recent reports that young people are increasingly using vaping products, particularly some of the flavoured vaping products, that's often an entry into nicotine use in teenagers and we have to balance off those risks and benefits," Philpott said.
     
    Health Canada also said federal work continues on a proposed ban on menthol cigarettes, as well as a commitment to introduce plain and standardized packaging requirements on all tobacco products.
     
    Several provinces and municipalities have already brought forward measures on vaping, but federal legislation is required, said Rob Cunningham, a senior policy adviser at the Canadian Cancer Society.
     
    "It's clearly something that needs regulation," he said in an interview. "We don't want kids to be using these cigarettes."
     
    Revised tobacco legislation must address not only e-cigarettes, but topics such as new industry marketing tactics, water-pipe smoking and regulation of marijuana, he said.
     
    "There's a whole bunch of new issues that have suddenly made the tobacco issue more complicated, and that's why the new strategy has to be done right."
     
    The government says an estimated 87,000 Canadians, including many young people, will become daily smokers this year — placing them and others at risk of developing a variety of diseases and illnesses.
     
    Canada was the first country to introduce graphic warning labels to inform people of the risks of smoking, and the government bills itself as a pioneer in the restriction of tobacco advertising and flavouring to reduce the appeal of products.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    2 People Dead In Small Plane Crash In Nakusp Area Of B.C: RCMP

    2 People Dead In Small Plane Crash In Nakusp Area Of B.C: RCMP
      Police say the private plane went down on Monday in the Nakusp area.

    2 People Dead In Small Plane Crash In Nakusp Area Of B.C: RCMP

    Ontario Mother Died Trying To Save Son From Hurting Himself: Husband

    Ontario Mother Died Trying To Save Son From Hurting Himself: Husband
    An Ontario man who lost his wife and son to a murder-suicide last week says his wife died trying to stop their son from harming himself.

    Ontario Mother Died Trying To Save Son From Hurting Himself: Husband

    Vancouver Vaisakhi Parade Goes Green for 2016

    Vancouver Vaisakhi Parade Goes Green for 2016
    Khalsa Diwan Society and Vancity Credit Union help to make 2016 Parade the greenest in Vancouver’s history

    Vancouver Vaisakhi Parade Goes Green for 2016

    B.C. Forms Investigation Team To Tackle Money Laundering, Illegal Gaming

    Finance Minister Mike de Jong says 22 officers with the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit will now be dedicated to investigating groups that use gaming facilites to legalize the proceeds of crime.

    B.C. Forms Investigation Team To Tackle Money Laundering, Illegal Gaming

    Province Urging British Columbians To Create Legal Wills

    Province Urging British Columbians To Create Legal Wills
    The province has proclaimed April 10 to 16 Make a Will Week in an effort to get more people to make legal wills.

    Province Urging British Columbians To Create Legal Wills

    B.C.'s Beetle-Gnawed, Carbon Spewing Forests Recovering Quickly Says Researcher

    B.C.'s Beetle-Gnawed, Carbon Spewing Forests Recovering Quickly Says Researcher
    The research from the U-Vic-led Pacific Institute for Climate Solutions says global warming is making B.C. forests grow faster and the trees are taking in more carbon dioxide, the gas associated with the globe's steadily climbing temperatures.

    B.C.'s Beetle-Gnawed, Carbon Spewing Forests Recovering Quickly Says Researcher