Editor's note: This story has been corrected to indicate that the Brown County expo center open house will be held on Feb. 4, not Jan. 28. It has also been updated to indicate Green Bay's scheduled Protection and Policy Committee meeting was canceled.

A Green Bay committee will consider measures to ban vaping by minors and to keep bartenders from drinking on the job.

Next week, Ashwaubenon and Brown County will hold an open house on designs for the future expo center.

Here's are the highlights of upcoming meeting agendas around the Green Bay area.

Vaping ban

Green Bay's Protection and Policy Committee will explore a proposal that would ban the use and possession of vaping products by minors. The city is looking to model its ordinance after one passed last year in Neenah.

Neenah's ordinance also prohibits the sale of vaping products to minors and says that no one enrolled at a secondary school, regardless of their age, can have those products on school property.

The committee was scheduled to meet at 5:30 p.m. Monday, but the meeting was canceled.

RELATED: Kimberly and Little Chute ban vaping devices for minors

Sober servers

The Protection and Policy Committee also will consider whether to adopt rules prohibiting bar and restaurant servers from drinking on the job or working while intoxicated. Dubbed "sober server" policies, these ordinances apply to people who sell or serve alcohol.

According to a 2014 report from the Wisconsin Alcohol Policy Project, Wisconsin doesn't have a law on the books for server consumption and leaves regulation up to local municipalities.

The report asserts that impaired servers may be less apt to cut off patrons when necessary and determine whether a customer is old enough to drink. They can also pose a problem for police, it says.

Wausau, Neenah and Madison are among municipalities that have adopted ordinances on server consumption.

RELATED:Green Bay panel OKs Brown County's $93M expo center plan

Brown County expo center

Brown County and Ashwaubenon will host an open house on Feb. 4 to showcase designs for the proposed $93 million expo center on the corner of Oneida Street and Armed Forces Drive. The facility will replace the Veterans Memorial Arena and neighboring Shopko Hall, becoming part of the county-owned sports and entertainment complex that includes the Resch Center.

The architectural team for the center, PMI, will also be on-site to answer questions.

The open house is scheduled to begin at 5 p.m. in the board room of Ashwaubenon Village Hall, 2155 Holmgren Way.