Red Alert

Posts Tagged ‘tobacco displays’

Smokefree 2025

Posted by Iain Lees-Galloway on November 3rd, 2010

The Maori Affairs Select Committee tobacco inquiry report is finally out. I’m proud to have been part of putting such a bold set of recommendations to the Government.

The mood on the committee was to direct as much of the attention as possible towards making the industry itself more accountable and supporting smokers who want to quit. That’s why we favoured recommendations like removing tobacco displays, plain packaging and funding for nicotine replacement therapy.

We tried as much as possible to steer away from further impacting individual smokers. So we didn’t come out so strong on proposals like banning smoking in cars or in private homes. Personally I’m opposed to both. The only initiative that directly affects smokers is increasing excise tax.

I see the tobacco industry is upset as is their front organisation the Association of Community Retailers (sounds so friendly, doesn’t it).

Good. If they’re squealing it probably means we are on the right track. The question now is: Will the Government show the same ambition as the committee?


Smoke-free 2020

Posted by Iain Lees-Galloway on May 14th, 2010

Today I’ve joined the Maori Affairs Select Committee in Christchurch to hear further submissions on their inquiry into the affects of tobacco on Maori.

Although there is a huge number of organisations submitting, there is a very clear theme: That New Zealand should have a target of becoming smoke-free by 2020.

Today in particular we have heard a lot of calls for prohibition as part of a package of initiatives to reduce smoking rates. I’m not yet convinced the benefits outweigh the negative aspects of prohibition.

But what it is time to do is look at a broader spectrum of options to reducing smoking rates.

Recently Parliament increased tobacco excise tax. It was another step in the right direction. However what we are being told is that taxation is just a small part of the answer.

Key initiatives that keep coming up include:

  • Banning tobacco displays
  • Plain packaging
  • Increasing funding for quit smoking programmes
  • Licensing tobacco retailers
  • Legalising less harmful alternatives like e-cigarettes

I reckon the submitters are right. It’s time to pick up the pace. It’s also time to shift some of the attention off measures that penalise smokers (like tax) and onto things that will hit the industry and retailers a bit harder.

We’ve done well over the last 20-30 years but change has been slow. Should we continue the incremental changes or be really bold about eradicating the avoidable damage and costs associated with tobacco?

 

 


Just what IS Tariana doing?

Posted by Iain Lees-Galloway on June 17th, 2009

A couple of weeks ago I asked Tariana Turia a question in the house about the international evidence supporting a ban on tobacco displays, something that she has publicly supported even though her colleague Tony Ryall has dismissed the idea.

I was working on the basis that the National Party ministers aren’t listening to their partners in the Maori Party. But as the questioning continued (amidst a volley of points of order regarding what Mrs Turia is and isn’t responsible for) it turned out that even though Tariana has publicly asserted her support for banning point of sale tobacco advertising, she has at not time advised Minister Ryall that he should go ahead with the select committee recommendation that tobacco products should be out of sight.

Which got me thinking: Just what is she doing?

So I asked written questions to see which groups actively campaigning for greater tobacco control she had met with. Of the 15 organisations I asked about she had met with just 3 – Te Hotu Manawa Maori, Te Reo Marama (TRM) and ASH.

It’s probably not fair to expect her to have met with them all, but the two she hadn’t met that stuck out like a canine’s proverbials were the Cancer Society and the Smokefree Coalition, the two organisations leading the campaign against Tobacco Displays.

I don’t think anyone really expected Maori Party ministers to have all that much say in this Government. But just how much effort is Tariana putting in to making her voice heard?


Turia Asks a Question only She Can Answer

Posted by Iain Lees-Galloway on May 29th, 2009

I’ve just seen a speech from Tariana Turia where she asks why New Zealand hasn’t acted to ban tobacco displays. Is she kidding? She’s the Associate Health Minister with responsibility for Tobacco issues in the Government that just turned down a select committee recommendation to implement such a ban. Perhaps she needs to take up John Key’s habit of talking to himself in the mirror.

However I do have to say that she was bang on with her assessment of the situation and the evidence from overseas.

I hope she can get Ryall to come round on this one, or failing that, support my private members bill… should it ever get to see the light of day!