Canada’s vaping  industry challenges Quebec law restricting e-cigarette use
		  
          Bill  44 prohibits the testing of e-cigarettes in specialty shops, bans in-store  display and promotion and forbids online sales of any vape product.
Thestar.com
            April 13, 2016
            By The Canadian Press
  
            The Canadian Vaping Association has filed a legal challenge against a Quebec  law that limits the use of electronic cigarettes.
Bill  44 prohibits the testing of e-cigarettes in specialty shops, bans in-store  display and promotion and forbids online sales of any vape product.
            
            The  wide-ranging law introduced by Quebec legislators last year was designed in  part to put the popular e-cigarette on the same footing as other tobacco  products.
  
            But  the association, which describes itself as a national group of advocates,  retailers, manufacturers and distributors of the electronic cigarette industry,  is challenging the constitutionality of the law.
  
            Association  president Beju Lakhani says the group’s membership includes those who’d rather  vape than smoke tobacco and business owners who sell the products.
  
  “By  introducing these measures, the government of Quebec, we believe, has  overstepped its legislative authority,” he said in a statement.
The  association argues the legislation may push sales underground, making enforcing  rules like banning sales to minors next to impossible.
            
            But  anti-tobacco groups have argued that e-cigarettes needed to be subjected to  regulations.
  
            The  legislation took effect last November, with certain provisions coming into  force later this year and others in late 2017.
  
            It  has been subject to legal challenges, with Imperial Tobacco fighting certain  provisions and wanting a judge to strike them down on constitutional grounds.
  
            The  law also bans flavoured tobacco, lighting up on restaurant patios and smoking  inside vehicles that have minors.