Sheffield Council has responded to Forest's criticism of their decision to ban vaping as well as smoking in children's play areas.
See: Sheffield smokefree playground campaign an ‘abuse of public money’ says lobby group Forest.
There's some logic to this which is why smokers and vapers should fight such policies together.
After all, if public health wins the argument that children must be 'protected' from the sight of anything they cannot legally purchase, it's a short step to banning smoking, vaping and drinking in all sorts of locations where children might be present.
Growing up in Scotland in the Seventies I remember pubs having frosted glass and customers being barred from taking their drinks outside. The reason, or so I was told, was to 'protect' children from the sight of people drinking.
And this is where many vapers are getting it wrong. They are so desperate to draw a distinction between smoking and vaping they shy away from defending smoking in public places - even outside - preferring to look the other way.
Sheffield Council's policy on smoking and vaping in children's play areas demonstrates the misguided nature of this one-eyed, ostrich-like approach.
If you keep quiet about smoking bans (effectively endorsing them) you open the door to similar bans on vaping for the reasons the council has given.
In any battle there is a frontline. If you concede territory the battleground moves closer to home. Vapers are not immune to the war on tobacco so every time smokers lose ground the threat to vaping increases because a precedent has been set.
Unfortunately many vapers are either too blind to see the danger to their own habit or they have been convinced of the virtues of vaping as a weapon in the war on tobacco.
Having effectively joined forces with tobacco control they believe, optimistically, they will be exempt from excessive regulations.
It's a naive and blinkered view that ignores the reality that most public health advocates of vaping want e-cigarettes to be a smoking cessation tool and nothing else.
On no account should vaping be 'normalised' among the general public nor should it be allowed where it might be seen by children - hence the bans on the use of e-cigarettes on beaches, hospital grounds and in play areas (not to mention Nottingham City Council's ban on vaping during work breaks).
Admittedly there are relatively few policies like that at present but the fact that some exist - without a murmur of protest from pro-vaping public health campaigners - ought to concern our vaping buddies.
Instead many persist in seeing the tobacco control industry as their friend. Good luck with that.