Friday, June 13, 2014

Yes, you may smoke in public parks


With summer in full swing, smokers may wonder whether they can light up during certain outdoor events.
According to the recently passed ordinance, smoking is only banned in enclosed places. Debra Bradley, health director, said there is no provision that prohibits smoking in public parks.
“It’s just enclosed places,” she said.
Those who do choose to smoke in parks, however, still need to stay at least five feet away from doors, windows and air intake systems.
St. Joseph voters in April passed a clean air ordinance that banned smoking in all indoor places of employment, except for the St. Jo Frontier Casino gaming floor. It garnered nearly 53 percent of the votes.
Ms. Bradley said some citizens may be confused that the title of Section 17-327 —”Application of article to City-Owned Facilities and Property” —does not specifically clarify indoor or enclosed property.
“The meat of the paragraph is what is the law,” she said.
It reads: “All enclosed areas, including buildings and vehicles owned, leased or operated by the City of St. Joseph shall be subject to the provisions of this article.”
So events like tonight’s Parties on the Parkway at the Southwest Parkway or this weekend’s Coleman Hawkins Jazz Festival at Felix Street Square will still be smoking areas.
However, there is a provision in the ordinance (Sec. 17-334) that allows for any “owner, operator, manager, or other person in control” of an outdoor area to declare it a nonsmoking zone.
“If the people who are running the program want to make it a nonsmoking event, they could,” Ms. Bradley said. “If they chose to be nonsmoking, they don’t have to have a sign.”
Mary Robertson, public information officer for the city, said they will not enforce the smoking ban at Parties on the Parkway.

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Tobacco giant defends ultra cheap cigarette brand

The independent Senator Nick Xenophon is pushing for a minimum floor price on tobacco, as British American Tobacco defends its decision to cut the price of its cigarettes.

It says the former federal government's increase to the tobacco excise is simply feeding the demand for cheaper products.

But Senator Xenophon says this is a "deeply cynical and destructive" move by big tobacco, and he wants to prevent companies from flooding the market with more cheap cigarettes.

Thomas Oriti has our report.

THOMAS ORITI: British American Tobacco is claiming to now be offering the cheapest cigarettes on the Australian market at $13 a pack, which is nearly half the cost of premium brands.

They also claim this price discounting is the result of the Government's own attempts to drive the cost up in order to put people off the expensive and unhealthy habit.

BAT spokesman Scott McIntyre has told RN the company had to act to protect its market.

SCOTT MCINTYRE: What's been happening over the last five years in Australia is we've seen a 66 per cent growth in the low-price segment.

Now, the low price segment is cigarettes which are sold for under $15, and that's in direct effect of the excise system and plain packaging certainly murkies the waters a little bit there.

But excise has driven the top line of cigarettes up to around $25, but what smokers have done is they've gone, I'm not going paying that sort of money for it, I'm not going to quit, I'm going to look for cheaper brands.

So they've forced a whole lot of competition at the bottom.

THOMAS ORITI: Last August, the former government announced plans to increase the excise rate on tobacco.

That resulted in a 12.5 per cent hike each year until 2016. The move is expected to raise billions of dollars, but it also pushed up the price of cigarettes.

Scott McIntyre says there's no denying the health impacts of smoking, but he says with millions of smokers in Australia, British American Tobacco still needs to compete in a tough market.

SCOTT MCINTYRE: We're a legal business and we sell a legal product and our competitors are playing very strongly at this part of the market.

Smokers are walking into retail outlets and demanding the cheapest pack. Forty-two per cent of all cigarettes sold in Australia at the moment are under $15.

THOMAS ORITI: The independent Senator Nick Xenophon isn't convinced.

Monday, June 9, 2014

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