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June 4, 2008

Dubai bans sale of cigarettes to under 20s

DUBAI— The Gulf emirate of Dubai on Saturday banned the sale of tobacco to anyone under the age of 20 with immediate effect and barred young people from public areas in which smoking is allowed.

The announcement was made in public advertisements in Arabic-language newspapers as part of a "Youth Without Tobacco" campaign.

A spokesman for Dubai municipality told AFP that cigarette vendors and managers of public places such as cafes and restaurants have been instructed to ask clients for proof of identity even to smoke water pipes.

Those breaking the law would be fined, he said without elaborating.

Before Saturday’s ban the sale of cigarettes in Dubai was prohibited to anyone under 18 and smokers were not allowed to light up in public places including hotels, restaurants, cafes and offices.

The campaign was launched to coincide with World No Tobacco Day on Saturday.

The World Health Organisation said on Friday that only a total ban on all forms of tobacco advertising can stop the "constantly mutating virus" of the marketing industry and protect vulnerable young people.

Dubai, one of the seven United Arab Emirates, is a regional tourism and business hub that attracts millions of visitors each year.

May 6, 2008

Don’t falter on cigarette tax hike

An increase in the state cigarette tax is long overdue and the Legislature should approve one this session. But lawmakers shouldn’t rush into the Medicaid expansion recommended by the Senate Finance Committee. Something less ambitious is needed.
Last month, the Finance Committee approved, for the second year in a row, a major expansion of the state Medicaid program. Critics reasonably question whether the receipts from a 50-cent tax will be enough to cover the cost.
Sen. Larry Grooms, R-Berkeley, argues that the program expansion will be followed by an increase in participation that can’t be sustained by the tax hike.
Sen. Grooms, led an effort to use anticipated tax revenues, some $159 million, to provide tax credits to small companies for medical insurance for the working poor. That plan has the benefit of engaging the marketplace in a health care solution.
Senate President Pro Tempore Glenn McConnell says the Finance Committee plan for expanding Medicaid doesn’t have sufficient support in the full Senate for passage.
The Senate leader supports the tax credit idea, but says revenue from the tax hike also could be used to bolster the previous Medicaid expansion for children, as well as educational programs aimed at reducing tobacco use among young people. His compromise is worth exploring.
At 7 cents a pack, the state tax on discount cigarettes is the lowest in the nation, and hasn’t been increased in 20 years. An increase would raise money for health care programs but, as important, would likely reduce cigarette consumption, based on the experience elsewhere.
That in itself would be a step forward in the state’s general health and well-being.
The Legislature should recognize the general health care benefits that can be gained from taxing cheap cigarettes and move toward a solution that can be enacted this year.

April 18, 2008

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April 4, 2008

Who benefits from tax on cigarettes?

You support taxing my cigarettes an additional $1 per pack for the benefit of two things you like: providing money to programs that help poor Floridians, and discouraging smoking.
I would prefer taxing the Orlando Sentinel $1 a copy, for the benefit of two things I like: reducing property taxes in Central Florida, and discouraging people from reading Orlando Sentinel editorials that propose raising my taxes.
Both ideas are crazy, because they advocate a funding source for a desired program that would cause income from that source to decline. In fact, both ideas will produce zero income for the first goal if the second goal is attained. But both ideas are politically viable because they tax a minority group of people for the benefit of a larger group of people.
If you truly want to achieve the dual benefits envisioned by your editorial, you should seek a reliable funding source for the government programs you like, and call for making cigarettes illegal. If your position really is that enough smokers will keep smoking to fund your desired program, then you are simply advocating a regressive tax, and should say so plainly.

March 28, 2008

Govts seek self-extinguishing cigarettes

 

Self-extinguishing cigarettes could be mandatory from next year, following a meeting of emergency services ministers in Canberra.
A final decision will be up to Treasurer Wayne Swan but federal Attorney-General Robert McClelland said a commitment was reached at the meeting.
"We have committed to implementing a national standard for the introduction of reduced fire-risk cigarettes," he told reporters in Canberra.
"We’re making recommendations to the treasurer," Mr McClelland said.
"The reality is that while there is commitment from all governments to implement it, there will be some consultation with industry.
"The timetable we have asked treasury to work towards is early 2009."
Mr Swan will have the final call because making the change mandatory would require an amendment to the Trade Practices Act.
NSW Emergency Services Minister Nathan Rees, who initiated the debate, said 67 people died last year from fires started by cigarettes.
"This issue has been around since 2005," Mr Rees said.
"In NSW, we have up to 20 deaths each year directly attributable to cigarettes that can’t extinguish themselves and that’s in addition to property damage which in some cases is up to $80 million a year."
A spokesman for the Australian arm of British American Tobacco said the company was broadly supportive of the aim.
"British American Tobacco supports the goal of reducing the incidents of fires caused by the careless disposal of lit cigarettes," spokesman Bede Fennell told AAP.
"We have been an active participant in the consultation process with the ACCC and Standards Australia and are grateful of the opportunity to ensure the practicalities of such a change and all unintended consequences are ironed out."
Mr Fennell warned smokers not to treat the new cigarettes as "safe".
"It is important, however, that smokers are aware that cigarettes produced to meet the proposed reduced-fire risk standard are not fire safe and all lit cigarettes should be carefully disposed of."

March 25, 2008

Survey: Minors Successful in Buying Tobacco 13% of Time

Results of a new survey from the Tobacco Retailer Inspection Program (TRIP) found minors staged to by tobacco were successful in their purchase nearly 13% of the time.
Aaron Jones with TRIP says even though it’s the first time the rate has increased in several years it’s still a big improvement over seven years ago when 40 percent of state retailers sold cigarettes products to minors.
In Indiana it is illegal for a clerk to sell tobacco products to anyone under the age of 18.
Jones says TRIP conducts over 6,600 unannounced inspections of retail outlets across the state each year. An inspection team consists of a minor without an ID, an adult assistant and an excise police officer. The minor attempts to buy a cigarettes product and if successful, the officer issues a violation notice to both the clerk and the store.
Fines range from $50 to $500 depending on the store’s violations history.
Tobacco retailer inspections usually occur on evenings or weekends because the minors recruited for the inspection teams are in school on weekdays and most of the police officers work only part-time as inspectors.

March 18, 2008

Harry Potter is now Harry Puffer

LONDON: The warning ‘Smokers Die Younger’ doesn’t seem to ring a bell with superstar Daniel Radcliffe who has been nicknamed ‘Harry Puffer’ by his co-stars for puffing about 20 cigarettes a day.
The young wizard rushes to light a stick whenever the director yells "Cut" and has now been advised by one and all on the set of the new Hogwarts movie to kick the butt.
The teenage star finishes around a pack per day and has pals, including fellow Potter star Rupert Grint, pretty worried.
"Daniel has recently been smoking up to 20 cigarettes a day. Every time they call ‘Cut’, he lights up. It’s disgusting. Friends and co-stars including Rupert Grint have been warning him about the dangers of smoking. But he doesn’t take any notice," The Sun quoted a source, as saying.
Also worried are the producers of the final flick in the series, who believe that his puffing habits may destroy his schoolboy image. They have now warned him not to be seen smoking in public.
"He’s been having late nights out with stars like Kevin Spacey and Stephen Fry and seems to have picked up bad habits from the luvvie set," revealed the source.
In fact, Radcliffe was so nervous doing a stunt himself and turned to his cigarettes while his double was absent.
"He was sparking up constantly," said the source.

March 14, 2008

Wisconsin Senate passes fire-safe cigarette bill

MADISON, Wis. - Wisconsin businesses would have to sell fire-safe cigarettes that automatically extinguish when they’re not being smoked under a bill that has passed the state Senate.
The measure now heads to Gov. Jim Doyle for his consideration. The Assembly has also passed it.
Wisconsin would join 22 other states in allowing only fire-safe cigarettes to be sold. Firefighters and emergency responders support the measure.
Tobacco companies have not fought it. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company plans to voluntarily switch all its cigarettes to the fire-safe kind by the end of next year.

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