Beginning Sept. 1, any Texas student caught vaping at school will face a harsher penalty under a new state law.
makes vaping punishable by mandatory assignment to a Disciplinary Alternative Education Program, or DAEP, run by the district.
Previously, penalties were at a district鈥檚 discretion.
HB 114 also relaxes punishment for students who vape THC, the active ingredient in cannabis. Previously, students who vaped THC had been expelled.
Dallas trustee Edwin Flores said smoking anything from an e-cigarette now carries the same penalty as 鈥渂ringing drugs or alcohol to school.鈥 The board on Thursday formally adopted the new policy for its student code of conduct.
"The law鈥檚, the law and our policies follow the law," he said.
Flores, an attorney, welcomed the policy because he鈥檚 also a biologist.
鈥淎s a biologist you know, to me, if you put something burning into your lungs, that鈥檚 not healthy,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hether it鈥檚 cigarettes, a cigar, pot or vaping, it鈥檚 the same bad thing for your health.鈥
Statistics behind HB 114 suggested up to 10% of Texas students vape.