State Rep. Devin Carney (R-23) hopes to prohibit the use of electronic cigarettes on school grounds in his bill H.B. 5219. Current regulation is limited to the use of electronic cigarettes by anyone under the age of 18; this legislation, however, would seek to expand upon the current bans to include prohibiting the use of electronic cigarettes on school grounds entirely. Schools already ban tobacco-based products, so this would add e-cigarettes to that ban.
“It’s critical that our schools be free from negative influences. Countless studies show that electronic cigarette use among high school and even middle school aged kids is rapidly rising. Not to mention that many kids who would have never tried a traditional cigarette are experimenting with e-cigarettes – especially flavored ones,” Carney said. “The bad habits brought on by them lead to the increased potential for addiction to nicotine-based products in the future.”
A recent Yale study notes that one in four Connecticut high school students have tried an e-cigarette. In addition, 26 percent of students who had reported to have never tried one were interested in trying one in the future.
Carney adds, “The availability of electronic cigarettes and ease at which they can be purchased by minors is a bit unsettling to me. We are fortunate to live in an area where many schools have already taken this initiative – a statewide ban on them on school property will strengthen those initiatives while also ensuring other schools, who may not have banned them yet, will have a ban in place.”
Carney has also proposed other bills including several proposals to lower taxes and increase the overall quality of life for the residents of the 23rd District.
carter courtney says
Legislators need to spend less time infringing on our rights by telling people what they can’t do which costs the public money in terms of enforcement and adjudicating the results of infractions and more time figuring out how to lower taxes, fix the infrastructure, rescue education, provide health care for the mentally ill most of whom not live as homeless. By the way who is going to enforce this stupid idea. I have to think that in our towns the police would be better directed to catching drunk drivers , burglars and other miscreants than handcuffing teenagers who are using a harmless smoking sessation device.