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Curtain falls on cigarette displays 09.07.09

by Simon McGeady, Inishowen Independent

A BAN on the display and advertising of tobacco in retail stores came into effect last Wednesday. Across the peninsula, from large supermarkets to small rural stores, businesses have been coming to terms with the new legislation.
Most shops and supermarkets now have vending machines for their tobacco products. These have been modified by the operator to remove any branding. However, in some of the rural shops around the peninsula cigarettes are still stacked on shelves and complying with the new regulations has not been so straightforward.
In McClean’s shop in Malin Town, the cigarettes are located not in a machine but stacked on a shelf behind the counter. Here the proprietor’s solution to the ban has been to drape two brown sheets of paper the length of the shelf. The cigarettes are unseen and the shop assistant parts the sheets to retrieve the customer’s selection.
At another of Inishowen’s rural shops, Doherty’s of Linsfort, things have been relatively straightforward.
“We have had a cigarette vending machine in behind the counter for the last number of years, so the change hasn’t made all that much difference to us,” said Mary Doherty, who co-runs the shop.
“The man that re-stocks the machine came here last week and took out the signs for all the different brands from all the slots and replaced them with plain white sheets with the name Benson and Hedges or whatever written on them. The big main advertisement on the machine was replaced with a plain blue sign with instructions for operating the machine,” said Mary.
The changes have not inconvenienced her customers.
“Friday at the Post Office is our busiest day, but nine out of ten people coming in for cigarettes, I would know what they smoke.”
Mary is confident she is in compliance with the new law but ‘will wait to see when the Health people come around’.
The aim of the legislation is to protect children from tobacco advertising and reduce the numbers of teenagers taking up smoking. Mary is in favour of anything that stops young people from taking up smoking.
She stressed the need for young adults to bring valid ID if they want to buy cigarettes at her shop.
“Children shouldn’t be able to buy cigarettes, but I wouldn’t ban smoking. When they are adults they should be free to make up their own mind about whether or not they want to smoke. I am 51 years of age and when I was young it was easy to tell who was an adult and who was a child but nowadays a 14 year old can look grown up for their age and an 18 year old can look a lot younger,” she added.
Ireland is the first country in the European Union to remove the advertising and display of tobacco products.
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