The Windsor-Essex County Health Unit plans to start pushing landlords to ban people from vaping or smoking cannabis in their homes.
The health unit board discussed the resolution Thursday to âencourageâ all landlords, multi-unit housing owners, and public and social housing operators to adopt the policy â which includes medical marijuana â in their rental units and properties.
Such a ban would mean that tenants could not smoke or vape in their apartments or houses. The health unit adopted a similar policy in 2014 for tobacco smoking.
âWe just changed the language to recognize now we have legalized cannabis, and also vaping as well as hookahs have become fairly large issues in our community,â said Nicole Dupuis, the health unitâs director of health promotion. âWeâve seen a greater use. There are health risks for all of those substances as well, in particular when you talk about smoking behaviour.â
The resolution includes pushing to have all future public and social housing developments in Ontario made smoke and vape-free from the start. The resolution also calls on the Ontario Ministry of Housing to develop policies and programs to facilitate the provision of smoke and vape-free housing.
There are other ways to take your medicine
Dupuis said the Windsor Essex Community Housing Corporation has already adopted the no smoking policy in its properties.
The ban is entirely voluntarily for landlords, she said.
âIf they choose not to do so, there is no legislation that is forcing them to do that,â said Dupuis. âItâs really up to them.â
When it comes to pushing for building-wide bans, the health unit lumps medical marijuana into the same category as recreational weed.
She said the Smoke-Free Ontario Actâs ban on smoking in public or shared areas includes medical marijuana. The health unit is âjust extending that into the entire building,â she said.
âItâs still, we would say, the same thing,â said Dupuis. âJust the like the Smoke-Free Ontario Act includes legalized recreational cannabis, it also includes medicinal. So when we talk about smoke-free outdoor spaces, it doesnât change because itâs medical.
âThere are other ways to take your medicine. There are pills, there are oils for medical marijuana. Teas, creams. Thereâs pretty much anything you can think of.â
âItâs not a regulated health product,â said Dupuis. âThereâs not a lot yet known about the extent of the health risks for vaping. So the recommendations are to treat vaping products, especially for secondary exposure, similar to other smoke products. There is vapour that gets released, so there are potentially some dangerous health risks to that and there is just not a lot known. So why put others at risk when you donât know?â
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