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BOH agenda 042416
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BOH agenda 042416
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BOH minutes 042716
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<br />Opinion: Consumers and businesses should set vaping rules | <br />March 21, 2016 <br /> <br />Read more: http://www.dailytarheel.com/article/2016/03/opinion-consumers-and-businesses-should-set- <br />vaping-rules <br /> <br />Soon, Orange County bar and restaurant patrons might no longer be using electronic vaporizers <br />indoors — not because of personal choice or the house rules of bar owners, but because a board of <br />unelected bureaucrats has decided it knows best about which products should be allowed in <br />businesses. <br /> <br />The Orange County Health Department might be well-intentioned in its efforts to discourage the use <br />of nicotine products, but a ban on electronic cigarettes in private establishments curtails both <br />freedom of choice and property rights, and might actually induce nicotine users to use more <br />unhealthy traditional cigarettes instead of less-harmful e-cigs. <br /> <br />While the case for a public health department to ban traditional cigarettes is stronger, it is well- <br />established that nicotine vaporizers are dramatically less harmful than smoked tobacco products. <br />Any evidence of harm to bystanders from secondhand mist from smokeless, tar-free vaporizers is <br />poorly established or nonexistent. In its zeal to stamp out anything resembling tobacco usage in the <br />name of public health, the health department ignores a basic lesson of economics: the importance of <br />incentives. <br /> <br />Currently, because regular cigarettes are banned from being smoked indoors, it is more convenient <br />for people who use both vaporizers and traditional tobacco products to substitute vaporizers for <br />regular cigarettes when in bars and restaurants, as users can stay seated to vape and avoid the <br />trouble of getting up to go outside to smoke. <br /> <br />A main motivating factor for tobacco smokers to switch to less harmful vaporizer products is that <br />vapes can be used in far more places. With the proposed ban on indoor e-cig use at bars and <br />restaurants, the department could unintentionally nudge users away from less harmful e-cigs and <br />toward smoked cigarettes if using both were to become equally inconvenient. <br /> <br />The proposed rule also tramples the property rights of business owners, who invested significant <br />amounts of their time and money to develop their business, and who should thus be able to set their <br />own house rules. Restaurant owners are already free to ban e-cigs if their customers complain or if it <br />is the owner’s desire, but setting arbitrary rules like a vaporizer ban places the burden of <br />enforcement on entrepreneurs while reducing their ability to craft a unique atmosphere for their <br />establishment. Further, the proposed ban will likely hit certain establishments particularly hard: more <br />bohemian and hipster-oriented bars, where patrons are more likely to vape, could see a drop in <br />business. <br /> <br />If the Orange County government absolutely must impose its will regarding nicotine products on <br />business owners, it should at least do so through the legislative process, not through an unelected <br />bureaucracy. If legislators vote on such an e-cigarette ordinance, Orange County residents who
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