Health minister puts nicotine pouches behind pharmacy the counter, bans flavours
Imperial Tobacco accused the minister of unfairly penalizing its highly regulated product while turning a blind eye to similar, unregulated versions that can be easily ordered online.
"The only reason that he did this is because he doesn't like the tobacco companies," said Eric Gagnon, the vice-president of corporate and regulatory affairs at Imperial Tobacco Canada.
"The biggest losers today are going to be the adult smokers that are trying to quit. He's just making it harder for these people to get access to nicotine-replacement therapies."
The company will comply with the new regulations, Gagnon said, but he called them disappointing and said they will only help the illegal supply of similar products flourish.
The minister said he's still exploring ways of preventing those products from entering the country.
"We want to make sure that folks aren't using them at all," Holland said.
"We want to stop this before it becomes the epidemic that we had with vaping, where we had all sorts of people who weren't smokers become addicted to vaping, and now that's having a devastating effect on our health system."
The move to take the pouches out of convenience stores has already been met with strong support from the Canadian Cancer Society and Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada.
"By the time Canadian children are back in the classroom, these products will no longer be displayed and sold in the convenience stores where kids stop to buy snacks or candies," Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada's executive director Cynthia Callard said in a statement.
Independent convenience store owners, however, are much less enthused.
Kenny Shim, owner of Busy Bee Mart in Toronto, appealed to the minister to find way to ensure youth are protected without moving the products to pharmacies.
"We know our customers by name, we know what they buy, and we talk to them about less-harmful alternatives," Shim said in a press release on behalf of the United Korean Canadian Industry Alliance and the Ontario Korean Business Association.
"We are ideally positioned to encourage smokers to purchase a cessation product instead of cigarettes. We cannot understand why Minister Holland does not recognize this."
Anne Kothawala, president and CEO of the Convenience Industry Council of Canada, called on the government to reverse its decision, saying it's choosing "to ignore law-abiding retailers in favour of organized criminals who are willing to sell nicotine products to young people."
Holland said gums, lozenges, and other existing products will continue to be sold in convenience stores.