среда, 27 июня 2012 г.

California Tobacco Tax Fails by Less Than a Percentage Point


A closely-watched effort to impose a new tax on tobacco to pay for cancer research in the nation's most populous state has failed by less than a percentage point after remaining too close to call for more than two weeks. The measure failed by 50.3 percent to 49.7 with about 5 million votes cast, The Associated Press determined Friday. The measure was losing by about 27,000 votes with 150,000 ballots remaining to be counted; too few for the 'yes' side to pull ahead. Lighting up the airwaves with campaign ads, the tobacco industry was able to cut support for a $1-a-pack cigarette tax backed by cycling legend Lance Armstrong from a two-thirds majority in March to a dead heat on Election Day. 

Since the June 5 voting, Proposition 29 has seemed headed for defeat by razor-thin margins, generally trailing by less than a percentage point. Opponents of the measure, which would have used tax revenue to fund cancer research, raised $47 million to fight it, a large haul for even the most heated state races. By comparison, Jerry Brown spent about $36 million in his successful 2010 bid to become governor of California and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and his allies spent $47 million to beat back his recall challenge. Mr. Armstrong and a coalition of anti-smoking groups raised about $12 million to bolster the measure. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg made headlines when he kicked in $500,000 to help offset donations opposing the measure from tobacco companies. Chris Lehman, campaign manager for the coalition supporting the tax, said the groups are conceding defeat.

"It's mathematically pretty tough" to expect a last-minute victory though thousands of votes have yet to be counted, he said. Doug Ulman, chief executive of the Lance Armstrong Foundation called the defeat "a genuine tragedy." "With 100,000 votes still left to be counted, we are obviously encouraged with the way things are going, but we are going to wait until every last vote is counted," said Beth Miller, a spokeswoman for the opposition campaign. While raising the price of tobacco has been shown to reduce smoking rates, especially in young people, campaign ads sponsored by tobacco companies instead focused on trouble the state could run into in trying to distribute the revenue, and pointed to a loophole in the law that might allow some research to be done outside California. California was once at the forefront of smoking restrictions and taxes, but the famously health-conscious state has not raised tobacco taxes since 1998. If the new tax had passed, California would have had the 16th highest tax rate in the nation.

13 Malden tobacco vendors sold to minors


Of 20 stores in Malden that sell both tobacco and alcohol, 13 sold the smoking products to minors in a recent citywide test, according to the office of Mayor Gary Christenson. The annual inspection was conducted by the Mystic Valley Tobacco Alcohol Program, a state-funded group, that verifies merchants do not sell to minors. "This is what can happen when important enforcement and education programs are cut.

Thankfully the Department of Public Health has been able to fund and staff the Tobacco Control Coordinator position that is so vital to education of the merchants and citizens," said Chris Webb, director of the Board of Health, in a statement. "Increased education and enforcement results will be reviewed by the Board of Health and continued non-compliance will result in permit suspension or revocation."

Tobacco money pays for improvements


The Norman City Council accepted a $15,000 grant from the Oklahoma Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust for improvements at Eastridge Park. The six-acre park at 1700 North Clearwater Drive is adjacent to the new Reagan Elementary School. The Healthy Communities grant offered through the Tobacco Settlement Trust will purchase playground equipment and a water fountain to help promote physical activity.

 “This was an effort that was led by a group mostly out of (the) Norman Regional Health System,” Parks Director Jud Foster said. In other city business, the council condemned properties at 330 E. Main St. and 619 E. Rich St. The owner of the Main Street commercial property has contracted to have the structure torn down. If that is down within the time requirement, the city will take no further action.

 The property on Rich Street has been “empty for decades,” according to city Revitalization Manager Linda Price. There as been no water service at the site since 1999, and there is severe deterioration. The owner is in Oregon and has not responded to the city. The owner of a property at 503 Daws St. will work out a plan for improvement with the city. That condemnation was postponed and will be revisited at the July 24 city council meeting.

Alarm as Wales worstfor pregnant smokers


WALES has the highest number of women smoking during pregnancy in the UK with one in six lighting up while expecting, a new report has revealed. The Tobacco and Health in Wales report, published today by the Public Health Wales Observatory and the Welsh Government, revealed that 16% of mothers in Wales smoked throughout their pregnancy in 2010, compared to a UK average of 12%. The figure is highest among women under 20 with nearly one in three in this age range smoking while pregnant. In the same period, 12% of mothers in England smoked during their pregnancy, while Northern Ireland and Scotland saw 15% and 13% respectively.

 The figure of one in six pregnant women smoking in Wales is comparable to last year’s figure but experts say the number is coming down slowly. Helen Rogers, director for Wales at the Royal College of Midwives, said: “These figures are worryingly high and those on women under 20 are alarming. Urgent action is needed to tackle this. “Smoking in pregnancy can have serious and long-term effects on the developing baby, and the effects on the smoker themselves are well documented and supported by a substantial body of evidence.

 “We know that quitting smoking is not easy and we need to be doing all we can to support these women to stop smoking and to send out a strong public health message to those who have not started. “It is easier to not begin smoking at all than it is to stop when you are pregnant. Also if you are pregnant now and know the damage that your smoking can do to you and your baby, then please take action and speak to your midwife.” Elen de Lacy, chief executive of ASH Wales, said: “Rates of smoking during pregnancy are coming down, but they are coming down too slowly.

 “It’s a big issue for us in Wales. We should be focussing on stopping young girls becoming the smokers of tomorrow. “We should be looking at why girls are smoking through pregnancy. There are some girls who find out they are pregnant and stop straight away and there are others who do not seem to be able to stop and we need to find out the reasons for this – is it education? “There are still myths around smoking and we need to raise awareness of the harm they are causing their babies, not just in the womb but also in the early years.”

 The report also found that smoking was estimated to have caused 5,450 of 30,550 deaths of Wales residents aged 35 and older. Meanwhile, an estimated 27,690 hospital admissions are caused each year by smoking, with the majority of these for circulatory and respiratory conditions and malignant cancers. Although smoking has fallen considerably since the 1970s, it has remained just below 25% since 2007. The current estimate of smokers is 23% of adults in Wales. The Welsh Government’s Tobacco Control Action Plan hopes to see this fall to 16% by 2020. Smoking prevalence was found to be highest in the most deprived areas including the South Wales Valleys, South Cardiff and Barry. Nathan Lester, head of the Observatory analytical team, said: “The prevalence of smoking is not coming down as fast as we would like.

This rate remains particularly high for Wales’ deprived areas. “It’s very difficult when it comes to economically deprived areas – it could be due to high unemployment or a number of other factors. “I think what we are doing is the right thing, we just need to stick at it and keep going.” Dr Judith Greenacre, director of health intelligence for Public Health Wales said: “I think things are moving in the right direction with the measures that are in place but this report highlights how much further we must go. “It’s really hard to say why the rates are higher in deprived areas or why people take up smoking. There is a long-standing health risk of smoking but that can be harder to teach than in some areas and it depends on what people relate to and what seems normal to them. “It’s a long, hard struggle of trying different approaches, there is no magic answer.

 “This information in the report should be used to assist stakeholders in taking action to prevent young people from starting to smoke, helping smokers to quit and reducing exposure to second-hand smoke.” Although the introduction of the smoking ban in 2007 has considerably reduced second-hand exposure to smoke, there are also still concerns about children’s vulnerability to exposure in the home and in cars. The Welsh Government said there were a number of programmes to try to cut the rate of smoking in Wales and tackle the issue of smoke exposure.

Dr Tony Jewell, Chief Medical Officer for Wales, said: “Tobacco continues to be the largest single preventable cause of ill health and premature death in Wales. “The Welsh Government’s Tobacco Control Action Plan aims to reduce smoking rates to 16% by 2020 and ultimately, envisions a smoke-free Wales. “Through the Fresh Start Wales campaign, the Welsh Government is also addressing children’s exposure to second-hand smoke by bringing home to parents the risk their smoking poses to the health of our children.”

Research uncovers tobacco companies' tactics to undermine tobacco control in Czech Republic


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They also found evidence that Philip Morris ignored, overturned and weakened the Czech policymakers’ attempts to restrict tobacco advertising, promoting voluntary restrictions as an alternative to binding legislation. The research comes from the first study to examine tobacco industry influence in the Czech Republic, which is published in PLoS Medicine this week. The findings demonstrate that major tobacco companies were quick to enter the Czech tobacco market, following a decision to privatise state-controlled tobacco interests in the early 1990s, and immediately worked to shape policies in their favor.

The research, led by Risako Shirane and Professor Anna Gilmore at Bath, is based on an analysis of internal tobacco company documents (released through litigation in the US) and key informant interviews. First author of the paper, Risako Shirane said: “Tobacco excise policy is perhaps one of the most complicated and least understood areas of tobacco control, and this makes policymakers particularly susceptible to tobacco industry influence. “Our research builds on a wealth of previous studies demonstrating that tobacco companies are primarily driven by the pursuit of increased profits, which means their ability to influence policy usually has devastating consequences for public health.”

According to the World Health Organization, smoking causes approximately 18,000 premature deaths per year – equivalent to 50 deaths per day – in the Czech Republic. Overall, 26 per cent of all male deaths and 10 per cent of all female deaths are attributable to tobacco use. Tobacco control has remained extremely weak in the Czech Republic, with the country’s policies recently being ranked the fourth least effective in Europe The Czech Republic is also the only European Union Member State not yet to have approved a World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control – a widely embraced international treaty that sets out concrete steps for governments to curb tobacco use. Cigarettes have become increasingly affordable in the Czech Republic since 1991, and cigarette sales remain high without a strong tobacco control policy.

Dr. Hana Ross, of American Cancer Society, conducted key-informant interviews which confirmed the findings and suggested that policy interference by tobacco companies remains ongoing in the Czech Republic, with tobacco companies continuing to enjoy high-level political support. Principal Investigator, Professor Gilmore, argues the results highlight that officials in the Czech Republic need to work harder to ensure tobacco control policies are informed by independent advice and protected from undue tobacco industry interference.

Tobacco Product Wholesaling in Australia Industry Market Research


The Tobacco Product Wholesaling industry in Australia is in decline due to falling consumption, increasing regulation, declining enterprise and establishment numbers, and a persistent decline in industry revenue. According to IBISWorld industry analyst Nick Sallmann, “smoking rates are falling in Australia due to rising public concern about the health risks of smoking, rising prices and anti-smoking campaigns designed to reduce the appeal of tobacco products”.

Increasing legislation prohibiting the consumption of tobacco products in public places, retail display bans, the introduction of plain packaging and rising excise taxes are factors plaguing the entire tobacco industry including wholesalers. It is expected that these factors combined will cause a 4.0% decline in industry revenue for 2011-12, especially as the industry continues to feel the effects of the federal government's 25% increase in tobacco excise tax introduced in April 2010.

Overall, industry revenue will have fallen at an average rate of 1.8% per annum over the past five years, totalling $2.17 billion in 2011-12. A small number of major players (i.e. the tobacco manufacturers) account for a large proportion of wholesaling activity. Sallmann adds British American Tobacco, Imperial Tobacco and Philip Morris are the largest players in the Tobacco Product Wholesaling industry. As wholesale bypass increases and consumption falls, IBISWorld estimates that the number of smaller wholesale establishments will decline over the next five years.

The Tobacco Product Wholesaling industry will continue to battle the same problems over the next five years. Government anti-smoking legislation will increase with the immanent introduction of plain packaging for tobacco products. Furthermore, anti-smoking campaigns will intensify thus increasing public concern over smoking related health risks and reducing the appeal of smoking. Industry concentration is set to indemnify as an increasing number of companies exit the industry due to the ongoing decline in revenue and consumption. Over the next five years, IBISWorld expects that industry operators will experience a 2.8% annualised decline in industry revenue, to be worth $1.88 billion in 2016-17.

Smoking: Public Health Wales warns on reduction target


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Ministers have been warned they need a big effort to meet their target of reducing the number of smokers in Wales by 2020. Health Minister Lesley Griffiths reiterated plans to ban smoking in cars containing children and young people if a three-year campaign does not work. Public Health Wales and the Welsh government estimates 23% of adults smoked in 2010, with the target at 16%. Ash Wales called for a year-by-year plan to meet the target. Ms Griffiths said the Welsh government would look to further legislation if necessary.

 Continue reading the main story “ Start Quote There needs to be a year-on-year plan throughout Wales on how we are going to get down to that 16%” Elen de Lacey Ash Wales "We launched Fresh Start Wales earlier this year to encourage people not to smoke in cars where there are children and young people," she said. "If our media campaign doesn't work we will certainly look to legislation and we have to look at every tool we have available."

 Ash says there is a particular need for a cut in deprived areas where more people smoke. Tobacco and Health in Wales, published on Wednesday, found that the number of smokers had fallen considerably since 1978 when 40% of adults in Wales smoked. But it warned that the fall in rates had slowed down in recent years. Jointly produced by the Welsh government, the report pulls together new and existing statistics about smoking. Newly-released figures include the statistic that 27,700 hospital admissions are related to smoking each year in Wales - 5% of the total.

Anti-tobacco rally by students


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Members of Eco Club at Government's Kasturba Gandhi Residential Girls' High School, Senha took out an awareness rally highlighting ill effects of smoking and chewing tobacco and "gutka" to mark International Day Against Drug Abuse (IDADA) on Tuesday. The rally that started from the school campus passed through different roads before reaching the assembly hall of the institution where a slogan writing competition held.

The participants in the rally were raising slogans like "nasha hatao, cancer bhagao", "sharab chhodo, samaj jodo" in Hindi. They also raised slogans in local Nagpuri language. As many as 64 students from different classes participated in the contest. Warden NM Tirkey distributed prizes among winners. She said district education officer P P Jha had recently ordered that 26 important days which included IDADA should be celebrated in the school under the banner of Eco Club.

"A weekly class of moral education is also being given to students following the instructions of the DEO," she said. The school has been playing leading role in carrying forward educational as well as co-curriculur activities among other schools of its kind in the district.

"Getting proper guidelines and support from DC Ratan Kumar, DEO Jha and DSE Farhana Khatoon the school is doing well in most of the fields including education, sports and other activities. Last year, one student of the school had participated in national level Science competition, said BEEO of Senha Salay Soren, also the chairman of the school's management committee.

Senator John Crown calls for ban on tobacco products by 2025


The Senator, who is also a consultant oncologist, said the measures should be adopted at a European level. He said placing a ban on the manufacturing and sale of cigarettes should be a long-term goal. Senator Crown said: "It will give the companies time to re-tool the machines to make something else. "This is a time when the world is short of food. Imagine all that agricultural land being used to produce cancer causing tobacco instead of being used to grow food.

"It will allow the pension funds to reinvest and it will give the addicts due notice, if you're still alive in ten to 15 years, you won't be able to get cigarettes legally." Senator Crown, along with Jillian van Turnhout and Mark Daly, advocated a Bill that will see a ban on smoking in cars in Ireland when children are in the vehicle. The Bill was approved at Cabinet yesterday.

четверг, 21 июня 2012 г.

Philip Morris To Introduce Lower-Risk Cigarettes By 2017


Philip Morris International Inc. (PM), the world’s largest tobacco company, said it plans to sell a new type of cigarette that poses lower health risks by 2017. The company is developing three products that would be sold under existing brands such as Marlboro, and the most advanced is a cigarette that heats tobacco rather than burning it, Chief Operating Officer Andre Calantzopoulos said in a speech prepared for a meeting today with investors in Lausanne, Switzerland.

 “We are on the eve of what we all believe could be a paradigm shift for our industry,” Chief Executive Officer Louis Camilleri said in a speech. The new products have “the very real potential to not only be a game-changer, but also be the key to unlock several hitherto virgin territories, most notably the huge Chinese market.” Tobacco companies have spent decades trying to develop a safer alternative to smoking, including a 1988 test of Premier, a heated-tobacco smokeless cigarette that its maker, now called Reynolds American Inc. (RAI), dropped in about a year. “PMI are far more advanced than I had expected,” said Erik Bloomquist, a London-based analyst at Berenberg Bank.


‘Most Promising’

The “most promising” lower-risk products would heat tobacco or generate aerosol that consumers inhale, New York- based Philip Morris said. The heated-tobacco device is ready for clinical testing, and manufacturing of lower-risk cigarettes would start in three to four years, Calantzopoulos said. A second product being working on would be lit with a normal lighter, while a third uses a chemical reaction to make an aerosol that contains nicotine. “We have to remain, however, alert to the fact that there may be bumps in the road, given the many complexities of this undertaking,” Calantzopoulos said. Philip Morris said today that it’s cutting its full-year earnings forecast to $5.10 to $5.20 a share, from a prediction in April of $5.20 to $5.30, because of the strength of the dollar against other currencies.

NYC sues Seneca cigarette dealer


The City of New York filed a lawsuit Wednesday against a cigarette dealer on an Indian reservation in western New York, claiming that the business has been flouting state and federal law by shipping thousands of packs into the city without paying state or local taxes or verifying the age of the buyer. The suit, filed in a federal court in Manhattan, targets Robert and Marcia Gordon, members of the Seneca tribe who were outspoken opponents of attempts by state and federal authorities to rein in the sale of untaxed cigarettes from reservations.

It accused the couple's Salamanca-based business of blatantly ignoring state laws requiring that taxes be paid on any cigarettes shipped off a reservation to people who aren't members of a tribe. An official with the New York City Sheriff's office confirmed the company's defiance of the law through a simple sting this spring, the suit said. In April, an investigator went on the couple's website, allofourbutts.com, and placed an order for 400 cigarettes at a cost of $30, plus $20 for shipping. The cigarettes arrived a month later as promised, and were signed for by an office clerk.

The suit said the delivery driver didn't seek to verify the age of the person receiving the order, the cigarettes didn't carry the surgeon general's required health warnings and no taxes were collected. City lawyers said in the suit that they believed that thousands of similar sales had taken place, costing the city substantial tax revenue. Reached by telephone Wednesday, Marcia Gordon said she hadn't seen the lawsuit yet, but was sure nothing the business was doing was illegal. She declined further comment. Gordon and her husband have made no secret of their company's operations, and have repeatedly argued in court that, as members of the Seneca tribe, they are exempt from certain state taxes.

 The couple went to court in 2010 in an attempt to prevent enforcement of the federal Prevent All Cigarette Trafficking Act, a new law that banned the sale of cigarettes through the U.S. mail. They said the law had decimated their business, which, at its peak, was selling $2 million-worth of cigarettes each month. Last December, they persuaded a federal court to temporarily block enforcement of a part of the law requiring dealers shipping through private delivery services to pay any applicable state and local taxes in advance. That suit is still pending. New York City's Law Department argued in the suit that the couple's involvement in that legal challenge indicated that they were fully aware of their responsibilities under the law.

The suit said the business' willful defiance of the law amounted to civil racketeering. "The City has made clear through our previous lawsuits that illegal sales of cigarettes will not be tolerated in any form," the city's chief lawyer, Corporation Counsel Michael A. Cardozo, said in a statement. "Businesses that flout the law injure the public health and evade taxes used to pay for vital public services. They can expect future enforcement actions directed against them."

V2 Cigs Celebrates Summer With Cool New Electronic Cigarette Flavors


V2 Cigs is announcing the introduction of two brand-new limited edition e-cig flavors! Cool, refreshing Mint Tea and sweet, juicy Grape are available for a limited time. Fans of the electronic cigarette company are thrilled and eager to place their orders. Both flavors are available in four different nicotine strengths: zero, light (0.6%), medium (1.2%) and full (1.8%). These tasty options are refreshing and a perfect fit for summer.

 The whole V2 Cigs team had a hand in deciding what electronic cigarette flavor should be launched next. A dedicated crew of taste engineers presented the V2 team with a rainbow of options and everyone weighed in on their favorites. After much debate (and a good-natured argument or two), the V2 Cigs team settled on the two they liked best. Both were so popular with everyone at V2 Cigs, it was unanimously decided the flavors would be launched, together. Mint Tea has the soothing properties of green tea paired with invigorating mint for a fresh, herbal taste.

V2 Grape is sweet and juicy; just like a real grape! Both cartridge flavors come in chic, new V2 colors: light, spring green for Mint Tea and a beautiful, rich purple for Grape. These limited edition flavors will only be available while supplies last, so V2 Cigs customers are encouraged to get their orders in early and stock up! V2 Cigs is the #1 ranked electronic cigarette website in the US and Internationally by Alexa.com, providing quality products and consistent innovation to their customers. V2 Cigs has distinguished itself as a leader in the industry for its ever-expanding product lines, powerful vapor production and great taste. V2 eCigs provides a smokeless alternative to conventional cigarettes at a fraction of the cost.

Cigarette disposal is butt of new York County anti-littering initiative


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No butts about it – the amount of cigarette litter at local parks and after festivals and events have prompted Keep York County Beautiful to take action. The organization’s main goals focus on encouraging residents to improve the environment through education, recycling, waste reduction and more. Recently, it received two grants from Palmetto Pride and Keep America Beautiful that will target cigarette butt litter and more. York County clean community coordinator Alysen Woodruff said a lot of cigarette butts litter the ground after local fairs and festivals.

“There isn’t anywhere for people to put them out without risk of a fire,” she said. With a $1,000 grant from Palmetto Pride, the organization will take part in a national program by offering 400 pocket ash trays and 200 vehicle ash trays to residents at local festivals, which Woodruff said is a “great way to reduce waste and prevent litter.” The ashtrays enhance the organization’s Recycling-On-The-Go Program, in which it lends recycling receptacles to people who request them for events. Woodruff said the number of people requesting the receptacles lately has increased. “We hope this will complement things like that,” Woodruff said of the ashtrays. A second grant, $2,000 from Keep America Beautiful, will focus on Ebenezer Park.

In addition to the pocket and vehicle ashtrays, the organization will also distribute more recycling receptacles at the 25-acre facility. “The population of the park is so high, we wanted to place the receptacles throughout the park,” she said. Specific receptacles will be for fishing lines, which she said have also been a popular litter-reduction item. Woodruff hopes for more elements to these two initiatives. “We’re hoping to complement this with some anti-cigarette butt stenciling at some of the county intersections,” she said. She also hopes the city can track the program, potentially through a global positioning map that will show areas where litter is more prominent, and where people have made a large effort to clean.

 But most of all, Woodruff hopes that recycling and being more conscientious of litter will be “installed as a habit in people.” Cigarette butts make up about 38 percent of roadside litter, she said. That statistic is based on numbers from Keep America Beautiful, which says about 65 percent of smokers litter cigarette butts. “People think they’re biodegradable,” she explained. “But the filters have a lot of plastic fibers in them, so they don’t ever completely decompose.” Sarah Lyles is the upstate leader for Keep South Carolina Beautiful and works with Palmetto Pride. “People think the filters are made from cotton, and they dissolve in water,” Lyles said. “But 95 percent of them are cellophane acetate. ... It takes about five years for a cigarette butt to decompose.”

 The effects of cigarette butt litter extend to water drains and animals, Lyles said. “When people toss about cigarette butts,” she said, “it pollutes the environment, but sometimes, it can clog up storm drains. When rain comes, it gets caught in storm drains, so the storm drains don’t work properly.” Also, Lyles said, birds pick up the cigarettes and use them in their nests. The eggs may not hatch because of the toxins in the cigarettes. Animals also can get sick because they eat the butts, thinking they’re food. Elizabeth Morgan, the city of Rock Hill’s environmental educator, agreed that cigarette butts are a problem. “People who would never throw trash on the ground throw cigarettes on the ground because they don’t think it’s litter,” she explained.

Rock Hill’s Clean and Green board has handed out ashtrays like the ones Keep York County Beautiful received at events such as Come-See-Me, she said. They’ve also counted cigarette butts at intersections, where they’ve noticed it’s particularly a problem. Both she and Lyles think education and enforcement could help curb cigarette butt litter. Rock Hill Police Lt. Brad Redfearn said if officers see someone toss out a cigarette butt – or any kind of litter – they are issued a ticket for $470. In 2011, officers issued 27 littering citations compared with 28 in 2010 and 34 in 2009. “They really can do a lot of damage,” Morgan said. “We really want our community to look clean and healthy.”

Court rules against British American Tobacco on cigarette advertising


THE Supreme Court of Appeal ruled on Wednesday that the health hazards of smoking outweighed the interests of smokers as a group. It dismissed an appeal brought by British American Tobacco of South Africa (Batsa) against an order by the North Gauteng High Court. Batsa makes and distributes more than 20 brands of cigarettes in South Africa, and employs about 2000 people.

 The appeal concerned the proper interpretation of section 3(1) (a) of the Tobacco Products Control Act, as amended by the Tobacco Products Amendment Act, which relates to a prohibition on the promotion and advertising of tobacco products. Batsa had approached the high court for a proper interpretation of the act, arguing that in terms of section 16 of the constitution, the impugned prohibition limited its right to engage in commercial expression, as well as tobacco consumers’ right to freedom of expression. The cigarette maker further argued that tobacco consumers were denied the right to receive information concerning tobacco products.

 It sought a high court order that the provision did not apply to one-to-one communication between consenting adult tobacco consumers and tobacco manufacturers, importers, wholesalers and retailers. The Supreme Court of Appeal said it had to consider whether the act’s limitations were reasonable and justifiable in an open, democratic society. It also had to consider the rights of smokers to receive information concerning tobacco products and the government’s obligation to protect its citizens from the damaging effects of tobacco. The court found there were powerful public health considerations for a ban on advertising and the promotion of tobacco products, and that the seriousness of the hazards of smoking far outweighed the interests of smokers as a group.

It also held that South Africa had international law obligations to ban tobacco advertising and marketing. Therefore, the court found the prohibition on advertising and promotion of tobacco products was reasonable and justifiable as required by the constitution. The Department of Health published draft regulations to the Tobacco Products Control Act on March 30. If passed in their existing form, they will tighten restrictions on smoking in all public areas, including covered walkways, service areas, inside bars, on beaches and in restaurants — leaving little more than private homes and cars where smoking will be legal. The proposed amendments also seek to prohibit smoking at workplaces, as they are deemed "public places".

HM CUSTOMS MAKE TOBACCO ARRESTS


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HM Customs have seized two vehicles, 27,000 cigarettes and made four arrests in four separate incidents this week. One incident occurring in a west side car park, involved two Spanish nationals who were arrested by HM Customs after their vehicle was searched and officials said they found to contain 20,400 cigarettes (102 cartons).

The men, one a 43 year old resident in Rota and the other a 59 year old from Cuenca, were seen acting suspiciously and were subsequently arrested for offences under the Tobacco Act. Both men have been bailed to surrender on July 19, both the cigarettes and a Spanish registered vehicle were seized. In another incident, 3,600 cigarettes (18 cartons) were seized after being detected during a routine patrol on Winston Churchill Avenue.

During an incident that is believed to be unrelated 3,000 cigarettes (15 cartons) were seized in a car park near Catalan Bay. Enquiries into both matters are ongoing. In a fourth incident, which happened on Tuesday afternoon, two Spanish nationals were arrested by HM Customs, at the Four Corners frontier station. The men, both La Linea residents, aged 43 and 25, who officers said they saw at British Lines Road throwing bags over the frontier fence.

When approached by HM Customs they attempted to evade arrest by speeding off in a Spanish registered vehicle. However, HM Custom officers from the land frontier stopped the vehicle on Winston Churchill Avenue and both men were arrested for Imports & Exports Act offences and have been bailed to surrender on July 5. The vehicle has been seized by HM Customs.

вторник, 12 июня 2012 г.

Cigarette Showdown As Californians Vote On Tax


California voters Tuesday will decide on Proposition 29, a proposed tax on cigarettes that spiraled into a $60 million battle The new law would raise taxes on every pack of cigarettes by $1, yielding an estimated $735 million a year for the state. About three-quarters of that would go to cancer research. "The American Cancer Society, the American Heart Association and the American Lung Association wrote the initiative carefully," Lori Bremner of the American Cancer Society told CNN's "Sanjay Gupta MD."

"The money is going to be invested in cancer research here in California and on tobacco prevention and cessation programs to protect kids and reduce smoking here in California." Studies show the tax will help decrease smoking and save lives, she said. But those opposed slam the tax as a misguided burden in an already tough economy. "What we're seeing in the state of California is a lot of frustration on the part of our citizenry that it's just another tax," said Dr. Marcy Zwelling, a general practitioner. The tax, she said in an interview with CNN, "goes to build bigger bureaucracy, build business, build buildings, not necessarily to go to cancer research." The opposition in California has been fueled by a huge influx of cash from big tobacco.

About $47 million has been raised in efforts -- including TV advertising -- to defeat "Prop. 29," including $27.5 million from Philip Morris and $11 million from R.J. Reynolds, according to figures from MapLight, a nonpartisan research firm. About $12 million has been raised in support of the bill, including $8.5 million from the American Cancer Society and $1.5 million from the Lance Armstrong Foundation, known as Livestrong. Armstrong himself has appeared in ads urging people to "vote yes on 29." (Gupta, CNN chief medical correspondent, is a board member of the foundation.) There is already an 87-cent tax on each pack of cigarettes in California. According to California's official voter guide, the health groups behind Prop. 29 say it will "save lives, stop kids from smoking, and fund cancer research," while those opposed say the initiative "doesn't require revenue be spent in California to create jobs or fund schools."

Bremner insists the campaign against Prop. 29 has traded in "deceptions." The biggest misconception is that the money collected "will be somehow wasted or used otherwise," she said. But Zwelling says it will heavily affect poorer Americans, who are more likely to smoke. And other efforts, including the state's ban on smoking in public places, have succeeded at pushing people to quit smoking, she says. John Seffrin, CEO of the American Cancer Society, says if the bill passes, "It would make California the second-largest funder of cancer research after the (National Cancer Institute) in the entire country." Some grant proposals that currently go unfunded would find a source of revenue, he said. "So, it's a tremendous opportunity for California to do the right thing -- not only for California, but for the whole world."

Undercover sting nets black market cigarettes


A federal grand jury has formally charged 10 defendants who allegedly were caught buying contraband cigarettes during an undercover sting. Federal prosecutors announced the indictments Thursday. They say the operation used a warehouse in the Chicago suburb of Hickory Hills to trade cash and drugs for unstamped, untaxed cigarettes.

The defendants allegedly paid more than $20 million for 100 million contraband cigarettes during a two-year period. Some of the defendants face additional charges of selling counterfeit tax stamps, distribution of cocaine, filing false tax returns and money laundering. The new indictments stem from an undercover investigation that previously led to federal charges against a veteran Cook County sheriff's police officer. Federal agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were involved in the sting.

A 60-year-old Motueka man has been convicted and fined $6000 for illegally growing tobacco leaf


Lawrence Reginald Jury apppeared in the Auckland District Court on Monday charged with being a party to the unlawful manufacturing of tobacco. In 2010, Customs officers searched Jury's address and found 4,790 kilograms of tobacco leaf. Customs says that would represent almost $2 million in revenue if the tobacco leaf had been manufactured at the time.

Spokesperson Shane Panettiere says Jury was providing flue-cured leaf to a person who he knew was unlawfully manufacturing tobacco. Ross Ferguson, 64, of Wellsford was convicted and fined $1500 for unlawfully manufacturing tobacco with Jury.

LDS Church, pols failed to enforce cigarette prohibition in 1920s Utah


One of the more amusing episodes in Utah history is the LDS Church-directed effort to ban cigarette smoking in the state. Passed by a compliant Legislature after a rapid, few-months campaign, the refusal of law enforcement authorities to enforce the law frustrated church leaders. However, once the law was finally enforced — with a high-profile arrest of four prominent Utah businessmen — Utah’s cigarette ban made the state a national laughingstock and the LDS Church, through editorials in its organ The Deseret News, paved the way for lawmakers to repeal the ban. The two-year-comedy is recounted by historian John H.S. Smith in the Fall 1973 issue of the Utah Historical Quarterly. As Smith writes, morality-based progressive movements across the USA, after achieving prohibition, reformers set looked toward tobacco.

“Thundered Billy Sunday in his most exuberant mood: ‘Prohibition is won; now for tobacco,’” writes Smith. In Utah, the move toward a law banning cigarettes online was signaled in late 1920 by articles and editorials against tobacco in church media, such as the D-News and The Improvement Era. As early as 1919, the LDS Church hierarchy assigned Apostle Stephen L. Richards to chair an anti-tobacco campaign. The Improvement Era “editorialized, ‘We believe that the abolition of the entire tobacco business would be beneficial to the higher interests of the human race,” writes Smith. Soon after, the Mutual Improvement Association, announced its slogan for 1920-21 “would be ‘We stand for the non-use and non-sale of tobacco.”

The committee chaired by Richards, then issued a newsletter that called for “‘coercive and persuasive’ measures to be carried out by special stake committees which were to work to interest the church membership in a greater awareness of the cigarette evil and the possibilities of prohibitory legislation.” All subtlety was cast aside after a church subcommittee issued recommendations that LDS stake presidents interview legislators to find out their attitudes on laws that would ban tobacco and/or cigarettes. Further measures, recounted by Smith, included a New Years anti-tobacco message from LDS Church President Heber J. Grant, and an article in the Young Women’s Journal “which outlined how each church organization was to cover some aspect of the antitobacco crusade,” writes Smith. While it’s not unusual for religious organizations to combat what it perceives as vice, the 1920-21 efforts assigned by the LDS leadership were specific designed to achieve a political goal — the abolition of cigarettes in Utah. On Jan. 19, 1921 following an anti-tobacco campaign in the D-News, state Sen. Edward Southwick introduced Senate Bill 12, which banned cigarettes and cigarette paper. The bill was muscled through the Legislature and signed by Utah Gov. Charles Mabey.

Its supporters were the LDS Church and other religious-based organizations. Opponents, as Smith recounts, were non-Mormon business interests and libertarian-minded citizens, including a few Mormons. The ban’s limitation to cigarettes reflected the times, when cigarettes were criticized for their cheapness and “unmanly” reputation compared to pipes. In fact, much of the anti-tobacco campaigns focused on the adverse effects of cigarettes on femininity. The National No-Tobacco Journal, in an editorial reprinted in The Improvement Era, had written, “How would you like to have women and girls, not only smoking the poisonous, stinking stuff, but chewing, slubbering and spitting the stuff around while they are baking the pies and the cookies?” (Smith UHQ footnote) So the bill was passed, and nothing changed.

Law enforcement organizations, clearly not thrilled about hunting down cigarette smokers and manufacturers, argued with each other over who should enforce Senate Bill 12. For 18 months the law was ignored. A frustrated Heber J. Grant, responding to increased suggestions that the law be repealed, “demanded that in the upcoming elections of 1922 the Latter-day Saints should vote for no candidate who will not declare his willingness to retain the anti-cigarette law on the statutes,” writes Smith. The comedy entered its climax stage when a bill to amend the law to focus on juveniles was proposed by state Sen. Henry N. Standish. It was quickly rebuffed in committee. Meanwhile, anti-tobacco advocates had found a public servant willing to arrest tobacco users. The new Salt Lake County sheriff, Benjamin R. Harries, orchestrated highly publicized arrest of four leading Utah businessmen for having an after-dinner smoke at a Utah diner.

The arrested were Ernest Bamberger, prominent Republican, Edgar L. Newhouse, director of the American Smelting and Refining Co., John C. Lynch, manager of the Salt Lake Ice Co., and A.N. McKay, the Salt Lake Tribune’s manager. According to Smith’s article, the four “were marched down Main Street to the county jail building on South Second East Street to be booked.” It must have been quite a sight. The clumsy, ham-handed gesture by Harries, no doubt approved by LDS Church leaders, attracted equal parts of media attention and censure. Smith notes, “Newspapers as far afield as Boston and San Francisco had an opportunity to wax indignant …” The Carrie Nation-ish Sheriff Harries did not stop his crusade. His deputies haunted hotels, restaurants and the state capitol arresting cigarette smokers, the more prominent the better. Outrage over Utah’s anti-tobacco law was soon accompanied by scorn and laughter by national critics. Local newspapers such as The Salt Lake Tribune were quick to point out Utah’s new, embarrassing national notoriety.

2 sentenced in Md. contraband cigarette scheme


The owner of a Prince George's County auto glass store has been sentenced to two and a half years in prison for his role in a plot to traffic contraband cigarettes across state lines, and a second conspirator will spend a year and a half in prison. Prestige Auto Glass owner Amir Miljkovic and conspirator Chun Chen, both of Bowie, were sentenced in federal court in Greenbelt on Monday.

Prosecutors say Miljkovic and a county police officer, Richard Delabrer, purchased untaxed cigarettes from an undercover agent and then sold them to Chen, the owner of a carryout store in Maryland. All told, prosecutors say Miljkovic and his co-conspirators paid an undercover agent nearly $1.8 million for more than 17 million contraband cigarettes. Delabrer and another co-conspirator are awaiting sentencing.

Saudi- Ban on cigarette sales to teens commended


Secretary-General of Anti-smoking Charitable Society Suleiman bin Abdul Rahman Al-Sabih thanked Prince Mansour bin Miteb, minister of Municipal and Rural Affairs, and Health Minister Abdullah Al-Rabeeah Monday for imposing a ban on the sale of cigarettes to teenagers. As of Monday, the sale of cigarettes in shops, supermarkets and grocery stores to customers under 18 years of age is unlawful. "This decision is welcomed by all parents since the new rule would prevent smoking among children and juveniles," Al-Sabih said, adding that the new regulation is in line with the Kingdom's vision to prevent smoking among the upcoming generation.

 He said the Kingdom is also a signatory to the Tobacco Control Treaty launched by the WHO in May 2003. According to the treaty, signatories should ban or restrict advertising and other marketing efforts by tobacco companies. Health warnings should cover at least 30 percent of the surface of a pack of cigarettes and all materials used to make tobacco products should be listed on the packaging. The agreement also urges governments to strengthen indoor-air laws, place high taxes on tobacco and act to stop the illegal trade of cigarettes. Saudi Arabia ranks fourth in global tobacco imports and consumption. Saudis smoke more than 15 billion cigarettes, worth $ 168 million, per year, according to the figures of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)'s Health Ministers Council.

 Prince Mansour's ban came following the recommendations of the third meeting of the National Committee on Fighting Tobacco held in November. The meeting urged the government to take legislative and administrative measures to ban selling tobacco products to youths under 18. The National Committee, chaired by Al-Rabeeah, took a number of decisions to combat smoking. They also included total ban on smoking in public places and not to display cigarettes prominently on the shelves of supermarkets and grocery stores. Besides these recommendations, a joint committee comprising officials from the ministry of education and health was to organize Kingdom-wide awareness programs among students to tell them about the hazards of smoking. In a report released recently, it was said that due to consistent efforts of the health minister, the number of smokers between 13 to 15 years of age in the Kingdom, has been reduced from 19.3 to 14.9 percent over the past three years.

Revealing the findings of a study conducted in the Kingdom recently by the Ministry of Health in cooperation with the World Health Organization and the Atlanta-based Center For Disease Control, Ziad Al-Memish, undersecretary to the ministry for public health said that 30 percent of young people are passive smokers in their own homes and 65 percent of the teenage smokers have a desire to quit smoking. Majid Al-Muneef, supervisor general of the anti-smoking department in the ministry of health thanked the ministry of education for the cooperation extended in reducing the numbers of teenage smokers. "We were able to make an effective awareness program among students in the secondary school with the help of the Ministry of Education," he added.

California weighs doubling its cigarette tax


California voters head to the polls today to vote on a $1 tax hike on cigarettes. The referendum has sparked a huge battle between the tobacco industry and public health advocates, with $47 million poured into advertising on the issue, and polls suggests voters are evenly split. California already has the country’s second-lowest smoking rate, with 14 percent of adults who report being cigarette smokers (nationally, that number sits at 18 percent.) That likely has to do with California consistently being the biggest spender on tobacco cessation activities.

The one area where falls behind other states, however, is cigarette taxes. It currently taxes cigarettes at 87 cents per pack; nationally, the average is $1.46. If California approves a new cigarette tax, history indicates it would almost certainly drive down the the state’s smoking rate. Numerous studies have shown that cigarettes have a high level of price elasticity, meaning that price can significantly influence demand. Most studies estimate that a 10 percent increase in price of cigarettes will lead to a 3 to 5 percent reduction in consumption.

Cigarette taxes didn’t happen in a vacuum; the past few decades have also seen the advent of numerous other policies meant to curb tobacco consumption, such as bans on smoking in public places and restrictions on cigarette advertising. Still, when it comes to driving down smoking rates, research suggests that raising prices is a pretty surefire way to do so.

CN Creative seeks agency to lobby for e-cigarette regulations


CN Creative has started chemistry meetings with a small number of selected agencies for a combined public affairs, consumer and business to business brief. The company is a leading UK manufacturer and supplier of electronic cigarettes through its brand, Intellicig. CN Creative, which has already held a meeting with Brunswick, is seeking an agency that can help it lobby the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency to develop regulation for all electronic cigarettes.

Many electronic cigarette brands are imported into the UK without control and because they are not classed as medical devices they cannot be regulated in the same way as other nicotine replacement products. They are also not regulated by Tobacco Product Regulations because they do not contain tobacco. CN Creative wants Intellicig to be positioned as the quality standard in e-cigarettes and a pioneer of any new regulations.

The chosen agency will also be charged with working on both a consumer brief and a b2b brief to ramp up awareness of CN Creative’s products. E-cigarettes hit the headlines earlier this year when Standard Life banned its employees from smoking them at their desks. Health experts have voiced concerns that users could be exposed to poisonous chemicals from the nicotine vapour the devices produce.