Should we follow Australia's lead on vaping?
A new poll finds two-thirds of New Zealanders want recreational vaping banned following Australia's move to make vaping products prescription-only
Mōrena and welcome to The Bulletin for Tuesday, May 30, by Anna Rawhiti-Connell. Presented in partnership with Z Energy.
In today’s edition: National clarify position on bilingual road signs; review recommends removing PM and cabinet ministers from intelligence and security committee; census unlikely to achieve several key performance indicators; but first, prime minister and health minister say we haven’t got the settings right on vaping
A vape store display (Photo: Getty Images. Design: Archi Banal)
Two-thirds of New Zealanders want recreational vaping banned
A new poll released by Newshub last night shows 68% of New Zealanders want recreational vaping banned. The result comes a few weeks after the Australian government introduced a range of new restrictions on vaping. Under new legislation, vaping products will become available by prescription only in Australia. Australian health minister Mark Butler said the new regulations will close the “biggest loophole in Australian healthcare history” taking aim at Big Tobacco’s “shiny” and “sweet” repackaging of an addictive product. “We have been duped,” he said. The BBC published a more indepth look at the rationale behind the changes yesterday.
Why your local dairy is now a vape store
Currently, New Zealand regulation allows for the sale of vaping products in specialty vape stores, with dairies and service stations limited to tobacco or mint flavours deemed less appealing to young non-smokers. Specialty stores are able to sell flavoured vape juices and disposable vaping devices. As Don Rowe reported in October last year, retailers are exploiting ambiguous regulations by partitioning existing premises into two separate stores. That is why your local dairy has recently rebranded as a vape store. Research in 2021 found that around 15% of specialty vape stores are conversions of that kind.
Body of research emerging that questions efficacy of vaping as smoking-cessation tool
The concern expressed by health practitioners and educators about vaping is rightly centred on the rising rates of vaping among young people. According to the most recent New Zealand Health Survey, the number of New Zealanders aged 15 to 17 who vaped every day quadrupled in three years, from about 2% in 2018-2019 to about 8% in 2021-2022. It’s illegal to sell vapes to anyone under the age of 18. As RNZ reported, school principals are reporting children as young as eight being caught with e-cigarettes at school. Health minister Ayesha Verrall said in early May that vaping regulation here has always been about finding a balance between “vapes being available as a tool to support people to quit [smoking] and making sure young people don't vape”. Emeritus Professor in Public Health at the University of Sydney, Simon Chapman, recently collated research that questions the efficacy of vaping as a smoking-cessation tool.
Minister has previously ruled out following in Australia’s footsteps but says ‘nothing is off the table’
Responding to the poll, Verrall told Newshub that prescription-only vapes could be an option. "Nothing's off the table... I certainly want to move to tighten up vaping regulations and I'll have those proposals soon," she said. The government called for feedback on proposed measures to further reduce youth vaping in January. Earlier this month, Verrall ruled out following in Australia’s footsteps saying there wasn’t time to make the legislative changes required this term but both Verrall and prime minister Chris Hipkins have said we don’t have the settings or balance right. Ben Youdan, the director of ASH, Action for Smokefree 2025, says policies of prohibition don’t work. Following the move to prescription-only vapes in Australia, he asks whether the tobacco industry “could ask for any better gift than a government-sanctioned monopoly for cigarettes, by far the deadliest nicotine products.”
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National supports bilingual road signs ‘in principle’
National party MP Chris Bishop has clarified the party’s position on bilingual road signs by saying the party supports them “in principle” but wants Waka Kotahi to focus more on “fixing potholes and upgrading our roads”. Bishop made the clarification after the party’s transport spokesman Simeon Brown said “we all speak English, they should all be English” when asked his opinion at a meeting in Tauranga on Waka Kotahi’s proposal to introduce signs in English and te reo Māori. Massey University’s Richard Shaw responded to Brown’s point of view by highlighting evidence that suggests bilingual traffic signs can both improve safety and respond to cultural aspirations.
PM and cabinet ministers should be removed from Intelligence and Security Committee
Stuff’s Thomas Manch reports on the major review into the Intelligence Security Act 2017, the law which gives the Security Intelligence Service and the Government Communications Security Bureau their powers. The government-appointed review made 52 recommendations including overhauling the Intelligence and Security Committee, removing a distinction between warrants for spying on New Zealanders and non-New Zealanders, and defining “national security” in the law. The recommended overhaul of the committee includes removing the prime minister and Cabinet ministers from the committee to improve democratic oversight of the spy agencies.
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First release of census data delayed, unlikely to hit some key performance indicators
Newsroom’s David Williams has an indepth look at Stats NZ’s scurry “to rescue” the census. As Williams writes, “the official line from the census programme board meeting minutes was: ‘Overall field collection for the 2023 census is continuing to track to plan.’ Unofficially, the picture seemed chaotic and calamitous.” Simon Mason is deputy government statistician and deputy chief executive of census and collection operations. He confirmed to Williams that it was unlikely the census would achieve several key performance indicators, including those involving response rates from Māori and Pasifika and that the first data release from the census will be moved from March next year to the end of May 2024.
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Anyone been to Aus lately and seen how many people still smoke around the streets... It's a lot, I was surprised enough that it stuck with me when I got back to NZ