Image 01

TobaccoReviews

Tobacco reviews and buying cheap cigarettes

Posts Tagged ‘monte carlo cigarettes’

Headwinds for Tobacco Giants

Monday, August 22nd, 2018

Increasing regulation is aimed straight at big tobacco companies, and not just in the United States. Australia’s government recently introduced a bill that would prevent tobacco companies from displaying their brand logos and colors on Monte Carlo cigarette packaging.

The bill would allow cigarettes to be sold only in plain green boxes with graphic health warnings taking up 75 percent of the package. The new rules would go into effect in May next year. According to the AP, the bill is likely to pass.

Tobacco giants have promised a big fight and are arguing that the move diminishes the value of their trademarks.

Similar rules are going into effect in the United States, with new graphic warnings to soon appear on packages. The European Union is also considering comparable measures. More than 1 billion people across 19 countries now are subject to laws requiring graphic tobacco labels.

The industry has increasingly moved into oral smokeless tobacco as a more socially acceptable form of tobacco use. That holds some promise, as workplace rules against smoking continue to proliferate. However, those smoking alternatives make up just a small percentage of the biggest names’ revenue. Some of the largest players have even moved into the curious direction of offering smoking-cessation aids.

Tobacco investors, beware of these coming changes and the threats to profitability that they pose.

Smoking Ban in Alexandria Bars Still Continue

Wednesday, August 3rd, 2018

If the city of Alexandria is going to ban smoking Monte Carlo cigarettes in bars and gaming establishments, it likely won’t happen anytime soon. At the behest of the Louisiana Campaign for Tobacco-Free Living, Alexandria City Council officials are considering an expansion of the city’s current smoking ban ordinance, which includes all restaurants and most workplaces in the city.

City officials hosted a public meeting with local stakeholders on July 14, and the overwhelming majority of those in attendance were against the changes to the smoking ordinance. At that meeting, Tobacco-Free Living officials presented data to back up their push for a statewide ban on smoking in bars and gaming establishments.

About 25 bar owners and employees spoke out against the proposed policy, with only one community member touting its benefits.

City Council President Roosevelt Johnson, who didn’t attend the meeting, characterized the group in opposition as “a small group of owners,” and said their speaking out against the ordinance isn’t what has slowed down its development.

“It’s still in the process,” Johnson said. “I think there’s still some review. We want to review it and do some things between the parish and the city.”

One of the suggestions from bar owners in Alexandria was expanding the smoking ban beyond city limits. The owners are afraid that if smoking is banned in bars in the city, they would lose customers who simply would travel to smoking-permitted bars elsewhere in Rapides Parish.

The state has a smoking ban similar to the current city ordinance, which allows for smoking in bars, casinos and other gaming establishments. Tobacco-Free Living has targeted Alexandria as one of the first cities for a complete smoking ban because city officials were progressing in banning smoking in restaurants before the state did so.

Johnson said he hasn’t spoken with Rapides Parish Police Jury President Richard Billings about the Police Jury’s interest in a parishwide smoking ban in bars. However, Johnson said he believes parish officials would be supportive of that move.

“It’s something that affects us all,” Johnson said. “It affects the city. It affects the parish. So why not have everyone involved?”

Boyce resident John Rougeou appeared before the Police Jury on Monday to ask for a parishwide ban on smoking.

Some jurors seemed receptive, but legal counsel Tom Wells said the jury does not have the authority to ban smoking in bars. Bars have an exemption from smoking bans, and while the city apparently has the authority to impose a ban on them, the parish does not. To enact a smoking ban that covers bars, Wells said, would require action by the Legislature granting the parish broader powers.

“Municipalities have broader powers to create laws,” Wells said. “The Police Jury has only the power to create laws granted by the Legislature.”

The City Council originally was preparing to vote on the expanded smoking ordinance last month with it going into effect in September. However, Johnson said he expects there to be several more meetings on the issue before anything official occurs.

As city officials did when they first adopted a smoking ordinance in February 2006, Johnson believes they will do a thorough job of researching what is best for the city.

“We took time to make sure it was done right, and that’s what we’re going to do with this one,” Johnson said.

Johnson, who has long been a proponent of clean-air and health issues, said he believes the smoking issue is one worth investigating.

“We are going to all work to compromise on the ordinance,” he said. “We will look at the past ordinance that we did and make sure it’s something that everyone can work toward — something that’s good, strong and healthy for our city, community and parish.”

Cigarettes Shop Taxes Light Debate

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2018

Monte Carlo cigarettes and other brands have long been a subject of debate, and a Saginaw News story about issues faced by roll-your-own-cigarette shops was no different. The Michigan Department of Treasury has notified about 300 shops across the state — including Let’s Roll Tobacco, which has locations in Saginaw and Bay counties — that allowing customers to use cigarette rolling machines is a form of manufacturing, and enforcement could be on the way.

According to the Michigan Tobacco Products Tax Act, failing to register as a manufacturer could cost store owners in more taxes, as well as penalties and interest on any unpaid taxes during the time they operated the machines.

Though the story was about the new taxes and fees certain tobacco shop owners could face, the discussion fell mostly on smoking, and the high taxation of cigarettes in general.

At Let’s Roll, smokers can get a carton of cigarettes for $25 plus sales tax, about 50 percent less than a carton of name-brand smokes.

While name-brand cigarettes are taxed $2 per pack, or $20 per carton, roll-your-own cigarette stores are taxed based on a percentage of the wholesale price of the loose tobacco they sell.

A few readers said smokers cost taxpayers more than enough already through extra medical expenses incurred from, smoking.

Other readers said it’s a person’s right to smoke if they want to, whether or not smoking causes health problems.

Tobacco Control Talks

Wednesday, April 13th, 2018

The Harvard Undergraduate Global Health Forum held a panel on tobacco control and mitigating global tobacco use yesterday. The United States has seen a dramatic decline in tobacco use and Monte Carlo cigarettes smoking since its peak in the 1950s, though most developing countries are now seeing a surge in smoking rates, according to Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Dean Allan M. Brandt.

One of the greatest difficulties in preventing tobacco use is the difference in tobacco regulation across countries.

“There is a great future in the tobacco market and it is in the developing world,” Brandt said. “Global health is about the relations of problems across nations.”

Most tobacco control issues now focus on the developing world and spreading awareness of the health risks associated with smoking through government policy.

“You need to make sure there is no local corruption, a free press, and a strong judicial system,” Harvard School of Public Health Professor Gregory N. Connolly said. He is fond of the acronym “KILLS: Keep It Loud and Local Stupid” as a basic approach to working with tobacco control in developing countries.

The World Health Organization has established uniform standards for production, taxation, distribution, and advertising of tobacco products. Currently, 172 countries have ratified the standards laid out in the WHO’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. The United States has signed but not ratified the treaty.

Connolly said this is because the United States values the free market over global health. Connolly said that in Thailand, the government was forced to permit the importation of U.S. cigarettes, even though it was shown that this would probably increase smoking rates and result in worse health outcomes.

In the first world, the health concerns associated with smoking have led some groups to propose a divestiture from tobacco companies. Harvard divested its tobacco securities in the early 1990s, according to Connolly.

Connolly advocated for other academic institutions to follow Harvard’s example.

“You should write an admissions guide warning people that Yale takes tobacco money,” Connolly joked, referencing the professorship in wildlife ecology and policy sciences endowed by former Phillip Morris CEO, and Yale alum, Joseph F. Cullman.

Kyiv to Prohibit Kiosk Sales of Alcohol, Cigarettes Starting with April 1

Thursday, March 17th, 2018

Despite resistance from affected businesses, Kyiv on April 1 is banning alcohol and tobacco sales from small street kiosks. While many praise the initiative as helpful in improving public health, businesses appear set to challenge the legality of the move.

The decision, adopted by the Kyiv city council on Dec. 23, specifically bans alcohol and tobacco sales in street kiosks less than 40 square meters – covering most of more than 10,000 such small business establishments operating in the city. The measure also forbids the sale of alcohol (except beer in plastic bottles) and tobacco during mass gatherings.

However, entrepreneurs who run kiosks call the decision unlawful and protested outside the Presidential Administration on March 11, demanding that Viktor Yanukovych ask the prosecutor to review the legality of the decision.

“Owners of big supermarkets obviously want to have a monopoly for alcohol and tobacco sales. Meanwhile these products account for most of the kiosks’ profit,” said Vadym Hladchuk, from the civil organization Molod – Nadiya Ukrajiny (Youth – Hope of Ukraine), who was among organizers of protest.

Entrepreneurs say no public hearings were held on the matter and the decision contradicts 1996 rules for alcohol retail still in force today. According to those rules, alcohol sale is allowed in shops bigger than 20 square meters, not 40, as in the council’s action.

Businessman Mykola Omelchuk says his small beer shop is under threat. “We have enough space, more than 20 square meters, so customers can come in and even take a seat. We sell quality beer and many customers appreciate the product,” Omelchuk said.

However, city council members say they are constantly hearing complaints from concerned Kyivans – especially parents — about the easy availability of tobacco and alcohol on the streets. While street sales of hard alcohol were banned many years ago, the measure would broaden the alcohol ban to include beer and low-alcohol beverages as well.

“Kids manage to run to a nearby kiosk from school and buy Monte Carlo cigarettes to smoke during breaks,” said Iryna Kovalchuk, who has a teenage son. “Supermarkets are probably easier to control so that they do not sell to kids under 18 and so that they do not sell counterfeit goods.”

The Kyiv prosecutor said many kiosk owners break the law by selling alcohol and tobacco to children. “In 2017, 60 licenses for retail alcohol sale were revoked and 30 more were revoked during latest check,” said Myroslava Mushka, a spokeswoman for the Kyiv city prosecutor.

Members of the city council are sticking with their decision.
“Alcohol and tobacco are not sold in kiosks in civilized countries,” said Oleksiy Davydenko, one of the authors of the ordinance. “Mostly it is young people and teenagers who buy beer and low alcohol drinks in kiosks, so kiosks simply fuel alcoholism among youngsters.”

Alcoholism has long been a problem in Ukraine. The nation is 5th in per-capita alcohol consumption, according to the World Health Organization, with 15.6 liters consumed annually. Experts say consumption might be even higher, as many Ukrainians, especially in rural areas, brew and consume moonshine.

Ukraine is also among the world’s heaviest-smoking countries; more than 27 percent of adults smoking, according to WHO. Making Ukraine’s cheap cigarettes more expensive, through higher taxes, and out of easy reach of young people are keys to curbing the addiction that prematurely kills 100,000 Ukrainians every year. A prohibition on advertising and a ban on smoking in public places are two other effective methods of cutting smoking rates.

And some experts note that the city’s kiosk ban is not enough.
“Despite the legislation being quite adequate in Ukraine, with print and billboard advertising of alcohol forbidden, low prices for alcohol and tobacco make these products very affordable,” said Maksym Boroda, an expert from International Centre for Policy Studies.

Public health activists also say authorities need to promote healthy lifestyles and legally recognize beer as alcohol, making it subject to advertising restrictions. “For example, football is being associated with beer, because in all commercials, we are being shown happy fans with beer bottles,” said Oleksandr Pocheketa from Tvereza Ukraina (Sober Ukraine) movement.

However, other Ukrainian cities have also shown that action can be taken at a local level.
City councils in western Ukrainian cities of Lviv, Uzhhorod and Ivano-Frankivsk forbid the sale of beer and alcohol from 10 p.m. to 8 a.m. in all kiosks and shops, except for cafes and restaurants.

Local police in Ivano-Frankivsk say that, since the ban went into effect in September, the number of crimes at night has already decreased. One city official said the next step is to forbid the sale of alcohol and tobacco in kiosks within 500 meters of schools and kindergartens. “Our town is quite small, so that would include a great deal of kiosks anyway,” Martsinkiv said.