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Vaping advocates push back against Palmdale ordinance

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Vaping advocates are pushing back in federal court against a newly enacted Palmdale city ordinance banning the sale of flavored e-cigarette products, according to court papers obtained this week.

The suit, filed by the California Smoke & Vape Association and tobacco retailer Cigs Plus against the city, alleges the law is “overly broad” and will “destroy Palmdale’s nicotine vapor product industry, and damage the livelihoods of the workers that it employs.”

The Los Angeles federal court complaint, filed June 7, also contends that the ordinance “will likely precipitate a public health crisis, as vapor product users turn either to combustible cigarettes or to black market sources to obtain vapor tobacco products.”

The law intends to curb tobacco use among youth, and also prohibits the sale of tobacco- and menthol-flavored vaping products, which have “little to no effect on the recent increase of youth tobacco consumption,” the lawsuit alleges.

The ban, approved by the city council six months ago, is aimed at the fruit- and candy-flavored products popular among high school-aged youth.

The vape association is comprised of wholesalers, manufacturers of nicotine-containing flavored e-liquids, and brick-and-mortar retailers. The suit alleges that Cigs Plus and its employees “now face financial ruin as a result of the ordinance.”

The complaint seeks a court order permanently halting enforcement of the law, and reimbursement of legal fees.

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