The District needs to find more than $1 million a year to make up for lost sales tax revenue before this can be implemented though. The next budget takes effect in October 2017, and officials say they don’t expect any problems funding an estimated $13 billion budget.
This new law comes as the popularity of e-cigarettes grows while public health experts declare them to be dangerous, threatening to reverse all social education gained from health campaigns and stigma surrounding cigarettes.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports a significant increase in high school students using e-cigarettes, from 1.5 percent in 2011 to 16 percent in 2015. Some studies suggests those teens are then more likely to become conventional smokers. Research shows more than 90 percent of tobacco users started when they were minors.
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