Source - http://www.marketwatch.com/
By - Jen Wieczner
Category - Accommodation In San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inncc
By - Jen Wieczner
Category - Accommodation In San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inncc
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| Accommodation In San Diego |
E-cigarettes, which use liquid nicotine solution and batteries in place
of paper and flame, emit vapor instead of smoke, and don’t produce the
telltale cigarette odor or ash. Proponents say that makes the devices a
discreet (and less harmful) alternative to smoking, enabling people to
smoke whatever they want, wherever they want, without attracting
attention.
But lawmakers and public health officials fear that e-cigarettes are
helping tobacco sneak back into non-smoking zones as well as the hands
of children. And because it’s hard to determine what’s actually in the
devices, they also worry that e-cigarettes may not contain nicotine at
all, but illegal drugs.
“Do you want to see a 15-year-old with a vaporizer making like he has an
e-cigarette but there’s grass in it, the liquid version of marijuana?”
says Massachusetts State Rep. Jeffrey Sanchez, a Democrat, who authored a
bill prohibiting youth from buying e-cigarettes and adding the devices
to public and workplace smoking bans. “You could vaporize anything if
you put it in liquid form,” Sanchez says.
Now that 20 states, along with Washington, D.C., have legalized medical
marijuana, Massachusetts and others are bracing for the arrival of
dispensaries, which often sell cannabis solutions for vaporization.
While marijuana vaporizers have been on the market much longer than
e-cigarettes, there is debate over whether the products can (or should)
be used interchangeably to inhale either pot or tobacco. The Tobacco
Vapor Electronic Cigarette Association, which represents that industry,
says none of its members make marijuana paraphernalia: “It’s a whole
different animal altogether,” says CFO Thomas Kiklas. That may be beside
the point, as marijuana vaporizers and electronic cigarettes are
indistinguishable. Some companies are even marketing vaporizers for both
purposes. Rapid Fire Marketing
RFMK
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, for one, makes the CannaCig vaporizer, but is rebranding the device
to appeal more to tobacco users than cannabis users, says spokesperson
Rick Lutz. “The reality is, whether it’s cannabis or tobacco, it can be
used in a vaporizer in order to convert what normally is smoke into a
vapor,” Lutz says. “You could conceivably walk out of a restaurant, have
cannabis and the effects of cannabis, without the smoke.”
Indeed, the ability of e-cigarette users to “vape” undetected everywhere
from office buildings to bars to airplanes, where smoking is generally
banned, has prompted efforts to regulate the new industry. Under current
Massachusetts law, “in the hallway of the school, I can’t light up a
cigarette, but I can light up my e-cigarette,” Sanchez says, adding that
he wouldn’t even be able to prevent members of the House public health
committee, of which he is chairman, from smoking during meetings in his
office.
Concern over e-cigarettes has especially focused on youth, who in many
states can buy the products without being carded, while sales of
traditional cigarettes and tobacco are restricted to ages 18 and over.
The number of minors who have used e-cigarettes more than doubled to
almost 2 million middle- and high-school students between 2011 and 2012,
according to a report last week from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
But where laws do restrict smoking, some people are using e-cigarettes to openly flout them. While actor Alec Baldwin was kicked off
a flight in 2011 after defying the electronic device ban by playing
smartphone game Words with Friends in the airplane’s bathroom,
passengers report that they’ve had no problem smoking an e-cigarette in
plane lavatories—or in their seat, for that matter. Rob Fontano, owner
and president of Fort Myers Vapor, which sells high-end e-cigarettes out
of its Florida showroom as well as online, says he has used them in
more than 20 airports, including Chicago O’Hare and Dallas-Fort Worth
without being stopped—even while waiting in line to board and in
airplane restrooms. “I have a pilot for a customer who will use it in
the cockpit from time to time, on a major airline,” he says.
Smoking has been banned on U.S. flights (and their bathrooms) for more
than a decade, with penalties ranging from thousands of dollars to
arrest, but electronic cigarettes have landed in a legal gray area.
While the Department of Transportation believes the existing rule also
applies to e-cigs, it proposed an amendment in 2011 to explicitly
prohibit them, says spokesperson Bill Mosley, “as there has been some
confusion over whether the department’s ban on smoking includes a ban on
use of e-cigarettes.”
But until the DOT puts an official ban on the books (it plans to by
mid-2014, Mosley says), e-cigarette users are coming up with their own
rules, or leaving enforcement up to individual carriers. American
Airlines’ non-smoking policy also prohibits the “activation” of
e-cigarettes, but some European airlines may allow them.“They’re not
banned on airplanes at this point—it’s a wandering policy,” says Kiklas,
the e-cigarette industry spokesman. “E-cigarette users can use the
e-cigarettes on a plane just by holding it in their hand.”
Fontano, for his part, says he primarily hides his use on planes as a
courtesy to other passengers. “If somebody saw a cloud of vapor on an
airplane and didn’t know what it was, they would probably lose their
mind,” he says. “I don’t really recommend using them on an airplane, but
you could, and people do.” Indeed, in response to Fontano’s recent blog
post on the subject of plane “vaping,” a commenter by the name of Mike
B. wrote on Aug. 5, “I vape on planes all the time. I choose a window
seat and am inconspicuous about it.” He’s used e-cigarettes on a dozen
planes in the past few months, he bragged in the post: “I don’t even
worry about it.”

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