"In general, I'm in favor of the FDA regulations, especially the effort to limit use among young people," Burr said.

Verma agreed.

"Eight years ago, when vaping products were first coming out, they were not regulated," she said. "When you have flavors like cotton candy ... who is it targeted to? These companies have a responsibility to make sure their products don't get in the hands of children."

Said Magon, "Anything you can do to make sure kids don't buy it, I'm for it. Here, we card everybody. We don't sell to children."

"I say ban online sales (of vaping products) and double the penalties on people who sell to minors and we'd cut drastically reduce the problem (of kids vaping)," he proposed.

"Just don't ruin it for the rest of us," he continued. That includes not banning flavors.

Magon said e-cigarette flavors, such as cinnamon sweet sugar cookie, helped him to quit smoking cigarettes.

"It changes your palate and is more satisfying than a cigarette," he explained. It helps you to quit smoking because if you return to a cigarette, "it's like the first time you tried a cigarette," he said. "Not good."