Issue 4

Page 1

THE

PROSPECTOR

801 WEST KENSINGTON ROAD, MOUNT PROSPECT, ILLINOIS 60056

THE VOICE OF PROSPECT HIGH SCHOOL SINCE 1959

smoke

VOLUME 57, ISSUE 4

SIGNALS

66% 34% 20% 19%

Percent of Prospect students who have vaped before

Statistics courtesy of a Prospector survey of 200 students. Photo by Erin Schultz.

BY AMANDA STICKELS Online Editor-in-Chief *Name changed for confidentiality

W

hen a fire alarm went off around three years ago, Prospect classrooms had to be evacuated for 15 to 20 minutes, and no one knew what triggered it. However, administration later found that a student was vaping in the school, and the vapor triggered the fire alarm. While this might have been another fire drill for some, this incident showed Dean Mark Taylor how the e-cigarette industry has permeated the high school setting. According to WebMD, vaping is the act of inhaling vapor produced by an electronic cigarette (e-cigarette) or vaporizer (vape). These electronic devices can be as small as a pen and contain a liquid usually composed of nicotine, flavorings or other chemicals, as well as a heating device that turns this liquid into the vapor. A study conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that the adolescent use of e-cigarettes has tripled from 2011 to 2015. Federal health officials told USA Today that three million middle school and high school students across the country are vaping, and Prospect has felt these effects (see graph). Taylor cites about 24 students that have been caught vaping in school this year and says this number has been increasing in past years. When a student is caught vaping, the deans and Student Resource Officer Chris Rondeau talk with them. On the first offense, the vape will be confiscated, the student’s parents will be called, they will be issued a ticket of $50 and detentions might be given to them. If there are further offenses, the vape will be confiscated again, more detentions might be issued and suspension is also a possibility. Because vaping has become so frequent, Prospect recently adopted a zero-tolerance policy, so whenever a student is seen with an e-cigarette within the school campus, they will be immediately given a $50 ticket. Rondeau believes this sort of monetary punishment is effective because vapes themselves can range from $50 to $100. He equates this sort of consequence with driving tickets. “Just like a police officer writes a ticket for people who violate stop signs, most of the public stops at stop signs. Sometimes the monetary thing is enough and can make a change,” Rondeau said. Alongside these punishments, vaping violates the co-curricular code, so if a student involved in any extracurricular activities is found vaping, they can be suspended from games, practices or even removed from the activity. However, senior *Carl Williams doesn’t believe that these punishments are very effective, as he himself continues to vape in school because of the immediacy of using it. “People are going to do what they want to do,” Williams said. “It doesn’t matter how many times you punish somebody. You can try to condition them as much as you want, but people just have their minds set, and if they have their minds set, they’re going to do what they want. That’s why rules are broken.”

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2017

In recent years, the use of vapes and e-cigarettes has risen. Prospect discuss risks, motives and other aspects of the habit.

Rondeau attributes this rise in vaping to the ease of obtaining e-cigarettes for underaged students. Although the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (USDA) has regulated the manufacturing of the product and will require e-cigarette distributors to put health warning statements on their packages starting in 2018, each state government decides the legality of e-cigarettes. In Illinois, the possession and usage of e-cigarettes are limited to ages 18 and older. However, students who are not of age often have friends who are legal buy one for them. Williams confirms Rondeau’s statement, stating that it was not difficult for him and his friends to obtain a vape when he was first introduced to the phenomenon in eighth grade. “One of our friends got one, and we would use it because it’s just fun to have clouds come out of your mouth,” Williams said. Despite it being legal for students who are of age, vaping is illegal for all people on school grounds. This is according to the Smoke Free Illinois Act, which prohibits any form of smoking in public areas. However, Rondeau and Taylor say that students continue vaping on school grounds because e-cigarettes do not produce a distinct smell, unlike smoking cigarettes or marijuana. E-cigarettes are also very small and easily concealable and one does not need a lighter to use it, so there is less risk of getting caught. “Someone could take it out and take a puff on it and put it away really quick, so I think students are using it because they think, ‘Hey I’m not going to get caught, so I’m just going to do it,’” Rondeau said. However, Taylor established a firm stance on disciplinary actions for when these rules are broken. “If [students] continue to [vape on school grounds], we will catch [them],” Taylor said. “There’s no way around that. We have over 200 staff, so we’re always coming in and out of some place or another. On any given day, [students] might get away with it, but another given day, [they’re] going to be seen by a staff member, and it’s going to be dealt with.” Taylor and Rondeau attribute the increased usage of e-cigarettes to the marketing of popular e-cigarette companies, such as JUUL. Comparing the rise of vape culture to the popularity of smoking cigarettes a few decades ago, Rondeau says that these companies target young people, saying that if they get a person hooked on vaping from a young age, they will most likely have a customer for a couple decades. In an interview with NBC, CDC director Dr. Tom Frieden stated that he believes there are major similarities between the tobacco and e-cigarette industry. “The same advertising tactics the tobacco industry used years ago to get kids addicted to nicotine are now being used to entice a new generation of young people to use e-cigarettes,” Frieden said. Frieden referenced a 2014 survey of 22,000 children and teens in which CDC researchers found that 68.9 percent of middle school and high school SEE VAPING, page 3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.