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Police and pro-Palestinian demonstrators clash in tense scene at UCLA encampment; PA groups monitoring soot pollution pleased by new EPA standards; NYS budget bolsters rural housing preservation programs; EPA's Solar for All Program aims to help Ohioans lower their energy bills, create jobs.

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Campus Gaza protests continue, and an Arab American mayor says voters are watching. The Arizona senate votes to repeal the state's 1864 abortion ban. And a Pennsylvania voting rights advocate says dispelling misinformation is a full-time job.

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Bidding begins soon for Wyoming's elk antlers, Southeastern states gained population in the past year, small rural energy projects are losing out to bigger proposals, and a rural arts cooperative is filling the gap for schools in Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

A Cigarette By Any Other Name: Safety Concerns in CT

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Monday, March 10, 2014   

HARTFORD, Conn. - Electronic cigarettes - also known as e-hookahs, hookah pens and vape pipes - are growing in popularity in Connecticut. Celebrities in advertisements tout them as a safer alternative to smoking real tobacco, but experts say there isn't enough science to back up those claims.

It's estimated that more than 250 different e-cigarette brands are for sale in the U.S. today, and since they are unregulated, according to Ed Miller, vice president for public policy at the American Lung Association of the Northeast, manufacturers are not being held accountable for potential health risks. Connecticut state lawmakers took up a measure last week that would ban sales to minors, which Miller said is a worthy goal, but not in the form in which it is currently proposed.

"We have some problems with it, quite frankly," he declared. "What it does is, it creates a separate category for vaping products and that's exactly what the American Lung Association does not want to see happen; we want these products to follow the same rules and regulations as other tobacco."

The Food and Drug Administration has proposed a rule that would allow the agency to regulate e-cigarettes as it does tobacco products.

A tobacco cigarette contains thousands of chemicals, dozens of which are carcinogenic. While e-cigarettes may be considered less harmful, Miller said, there is little research about the effects of the chemicals in them.

"There's glycol, which is a substance that they use in some of these, but there's no ingredient label on these and they're manufactured, many of them, all over the world," he cautioned.

Miller said he is hopeful changes can be made in committee on the bill pending in Hartford that would preserve the ban on sales of e-cigarettes to minors in the state.



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