Kids smoking in bathroom stalls and flushing their cigarette butts to avoid getting caught was a cliche of the 20th century. But the 21st century version is causing some real problems for a school in Maryland. Plastic vapes don’t flush as well as tobacco wrapped in paper.
At least four toilets have been destroyed in the past month after kids flushed vapes at Bel Air High School in Harford County, according to a report from CBS affiliate WJZ. Each toilet reportedly costs the school $200 when they’re replaced. Some of the toilets have also just been repaired rather than purchased new.
There was one point when every single bathroom in the school had a toilet that was not functioning because someone flushed a vape down them, according to WJZ. The school is now going to screen students for vaping devices using a metal detecting wand.
“Due to the frequency and severity of the issue, the School Safety Liaison began using a metal detecting wand to screen students for vaping devices as an interim measure in an effort to address this growing problem,” the Harford County school district said in a statement to CBS.
Vaping took off over combustible tobacco and cannabis products in the late 2010s but cigarettes still have a slight edge over e-cigarettes with American adults. But vaping is more popular with kids.
Rates for youth tobacco use are near historic lows with just 10.1% of high school students using any tobacco product and 7.8% using e-cigarettes for tobacco, according to the CDC‘s 2024 National Youth Tobacc