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Clear rules, clear enforcement, fewer unintended consequences

Why the coalition argues that clear, enforceable rules — paired with credible inspection — produce better outcomes than restrictions without enforcement capacity.

How to read this This page is informational and reflects coalition reading at the time of writing. It does not make medical or legal claims. Where the page describes a coalition argument, it is labelled as such.

What the public record actually says

Public Canadian sources are explicit that vaping products are not for minors, and that adult-access policy is treated as a separate question from youth-access prevention. Health Canada's adult-and-youth materials are written for that distinction (Health Canada — preventing kids and teens from smoking and vaping).

Alberta's own published rules set out the inspection-and-enforcement spine of the provincial framework (Alberta — reducing smoking and vaping: rules and enforcement), and the longer-arc strategy is published openly (Alberta tobacco and vaping reduction strategy, PDF).

Why proportion is part of the question

The coalition argues that:

  • Youth-access protection and adult-access proportion are not opposites. The first depends on enforcement; the second depends on whether restrictions on lawful products are calibrated against enforcement capacity and unintended consequences.
  • When restrictions on lawful adult products outpace enforcement, demand can shift toward unregulated supply. That is the displacement question members consider important to keep on the public record (Bill 208 PDF).
  • Responsible legal retailers, plainly recognised as frontline compliance partners, are part of the same youth-protection mechanism — not an obstacle to it.

What we are careful not to claim

The coalition does not make medical claims about individual product use, does not assert legal interpretations on behalf of others, and does not present opinion as evidence. Where governments are cautious about a claim, we try to be cautious in the same place.

What we are willing to argue

That blunt restrictions imposed without proportionate enforcement are likely to perform worse than enforceable rules clearly explained to retailers, adult consumers, and the public. And that public conversation is better when adult perspectives are included alongside youth-protection priorities — not because adult voices outweigh youth-protection, but because workable rules need both.

Sources cited on this page