City council to discuss e-cig ban once more

Published 6:48 pm Saturday, February 28, 2015

The Austin City Council will take a step toward permanently banning e-cigarette smoking in public places.

The council will discuss its first reading of an e-cigarette ban policy during its public meeting starting at 5:30 p.m. Monday. Though the measure would need to pass unanimously during its first reading, the council will likely enact the policy later this month after its second reading.

Council members passed a one-year moratorium last April banning the use of e-cigarettes and hookahs in public places and businesses. Yet the issue divided the council, which voted 4-3 for the ban twice before enacting it. The council once again voted 4-3 on Feb. 16 to move the issue forward.

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Council Member Michael Jordal, who was the most vocal critic of the moratorium in 2014, said he still believes the policy would be government overreach and limits a resident’s ability to decide whether to he or she would allow smoking in a business.

E-cigarettes are a cylindrical device used to heat nicotine and produce a vapor. They have been on the market for about six years and haven’t undergone thorough testing by the Food and Drug Administration. Public health experts say e-cigarettes are filled with an unknown amount of nicotine and other chemicals.

E-cigarette proponents say e-cigarettes have helped people quit smoking, though the FDA doesn’t classify them as a tobacco cessation tool.

State legislators considered adding e-cigarettes to the state’s Clean Indoor Air Act in 2014, which would ban e-cigarettes in public places similar to other tobacco products. Though lawmakers didn’t resolve the issue, many municipalities have passed ordinances similar to Austin.