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Cigarettes Sales Prohibited in Watertown, Tobacco Business

Wednesday, August 29th, 2012

best dunhill cigaretteWatertown pharmacies will soon be prohibited from selling Dunhill cigarettes and other tobacco products. The Watertown Board of Health voted unanimously on August 15 to ban the sale of smoking products at all health care institutions, like supermarkets that work pharmacies. “It sends the wrong message for health-care institutions, including pharmacies, to sell smoking products. Healthcare institutions are places that should be advertising health, and the harmful health effects of smoking are well known,” declared Watertown Director of Public Health Steven Ward in a research.

The board also voted to increase the minimum cigarettes sale age from 18 to 19, which will affect the 43 licensed tobacco retailers in town.

The “Regulation of the Watertown Board of Health Banning the Sale of Tobacco Products and Nicotine Delivery Products” will go into effect on Dec. 1, 2012. Pharmacies will be permitted to continue to sell nicotine patches and other FDA-approved substances for quit smoking habit. Boston was the first city in Massachusetts to ordain a similar law. Almost 32 per cent of Massachusetts is currently covered by similar ordinances.

Town Council President Mark Sideris argued that the two CVS pharmacies in Watertown will be affected by the new ban. He also added that he sent a letter to the Board of Health voicing his support for the smoking ban.

Illegal Tobacco Imports Seized

Friday, September 2nd, 2011

discount dunhill cigarettesTwo men allegedly tried to bribe a Commonwealth official in order to import more than 60 tonnes of illegal tobacco and almost 25 million counterfeit Dunhill cigarettes.

Police claim the illegal imports, seized yesterday in early morning raids in Sydney’s southwest, had the potential to defraud the tax office of more than $35 million in revenue.

A joint law enforcement operation made up of NSW and Federal Police, Customs and Border Protection Service and the NSW Crime Commission was set up after the Commonwealth official reported the alleged bribe.

Two men, aged 30 and 27, who police allege led the syndicate, were arrested at a house in Greenacre.

Detective Superintendent Peter McErlain, head of Operation Polaris, set up to target serious and organised crime activity at NSW sea cargo terminals, said the investigation highlighted the success of a multi-agency approach to disrupt criminality on the waterfront.

“As a result of the professionalism and good work of the Commonwealth official in reporting the matter to authorities, police were able to launch an investigation and bring these people to justice,” Supt McErlain said.

At dawn yesterday, dozens of officers executed simultaneous warrants at houses in Greenacre, Belmore, Roselands and Lakemba, seizing almost $450,000 in cash and tonnes of illegal tobacco and counterfeit cigarettes.

It is understood much of the illegal material was located in a white Toyota HiAce van parked a short distance from one of the homes.

The two men were last night charged with bribery of a Commonwealth official, dealing in proceeds of crime, money or property worth more than $1 million and obtaining financial advantage by deception. The pair is expected to face court today.

Supt McErlain said the fight against criminality on the waterfront was not over.

“We will continue to target crime on the waterfront, including drug importation, money laundering, container theft and corruption,” he said.

Cigarettes Stores Pass the Test on Tobacco Sales

Wednesday, August 17th, 2011

cheap dunhill cigarettesGladwin County should be proud: Of stores that were checked for compliance with state tobacco laws recently, none sold cigarettes to minors. In 2011, there were two rounds of undercover “stings.” These “stings” are when a trained underage youth, under adult supervision, tries to buy Dunhill cigarettes from local stores.

This effort is done in cooperation with the Michigan Department of Community Health, Office of Drug Control Policy Prevention Section, and the state substance abuse prevention office in Michigan.

Michigan is under a federal mandate, the Synar amendment, which requires each state to demonstrate that their Youth Tobacco Laws are being enforced to reduce access of tobacco products to minors.

Continue Fight to Reduce Cigarettes Smoking

Tuesday, August 16th, 2011

discount dunhill cigarettesWe’ll simply confess at the outset that we have no explanation for why Indiana has seen a drop in smokers. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated that 21.2 percent of Hoosiers smoked Dunhill cigarettes last year.

That dropped Indiana to the 11th highest among the 50 states. In 2008, Indiana ranked second for smokers.

There are a lot of plausible theories for the decline.

Markets are almost always preferable to mandates, whether in smoking cessation or health insurance acquisition. The very high and rising cost of smoking, in part due to the prohibitive taxes placed on tobacco in the public interest and targeted for the public good, has clearly been a deterrent. Who today could afford to be a two- to three-pack-a-day smoker?

And assuming they have the means to afford it, in what public setting could they readily smoke today? The expanding list of public and private places off-limits to smokers has served to remind those who smoke that they are unwelcome in a growing list of venues.

Over time, as that message penetrates, it no doubt contributes to efforts to stop smoking.

And then, of course, there are the established health risks. These have moved from a tepid surgeon general warning, first issued publicly nearly 50 years ago, to more precise cause-and-effect cancer and assorted health-risk — hypertension, heart disease and lung disease — correlations that have included the harmful effects to non-smokers of prolonged exposure to second-hand smoke.

Credit is also due the same market forces that have brought about many successful cessation programs and the availability of remedies and drugs that help smokers kick the habit.

Gov. Mitch Daniels just this week signaled the time might be right for the next legislative session to enact a statewide smoking ban, something other states have done but an effort that to date has not been successful in Indiana.

We would like to think that if the current trends continue, there might be no need for a law. Indiana with 21.2 percent of its residents smokers is still above an improving national average of 17.3 percent of the population smoking.

There’s more that can be done. And if that means enacting prohibitions, this newspaper still believes that should be done by statewide law uniformly, not a hodge-podge of local ordinances, rules and regulations that differ from county to county, city to city, and even cities from the counties that surround them.

Smokers face enough of a hurdle in their efforts to quit and deserve all the support a state can provide. No one deserves to be saddled with a myriad ordinances that render an activity permitted in one jurisdiction a violation just across the street in the adjoining jurisdiction.

IU Health Hospitals Prohibit Staffs’ Smoking Habit

Monday, August 15th, 2011

discount dunhill cigarettesSmoking is legal, but soon Indiana University Health employees will be banned from lighting up Dunhill cigarettes during breaks and their work hours. IU Spokesperson Daniel Lee says the change starts August 22.

Since 2005, IU Health’s campuses have been smoke-free.

But now, leaders at the hospital are concerned about third-hand smoke. The fear: those who smoke during the work days will pass those toxins on to patients.

Third hand smoke — toxic gas and particles — lingers in hair and clothes after a cigarette is put out.

Experts say a child’s exposure to third-hand smoke can be up to ten times greater than adults.

While Indiana University Health has been a smoke-free campus since July 2005, enforcement of the policy has been inconsistent.

That will change on Monday, Aug. 22.

A memo sent home to IU employees said the new policy now prohibits the use of any tobacco product, including smokeless tobacco, on IU Health premises or by IU Health staff during working hours.

First-time violators of the rule will receive a written warning as well as a referral to a voluntary tobacco-cessation program at no charge. Repeat violators will be subject to termination of employment.

Many employees 24 Hour News 8 spoke with say the change goes to far. One woman, who asked us to conceal her identity for fear of retaliation, said it will be a tough policy to enforce.

“It’s not fair,” she said. “I don’t think they can regulate what we do on our break. It is our own time and we should be able to use it the way we see fit.”