Hutt City Council endorsed the recommendation from the Wainuiomata Community Board to designate Queen Street as
smokefree. Exploring smokefree town centres is part of Hutt City Council’s Smokefree Outdoor Public Places Policy.
Wainuiomata will be Lower Hutt’s second smokefree town centre after Stokes Valley’s Scott Court became smokefree in
October 2017. This is the result of over a year’s worth of community engagement and consultation from the Wainiuomata
Community Board, Regional Public Health, Takiri Mai Te Ata Regional Stop Smoking Service, the Wainuiomata community hub
and Healthy Families Lower Hutt.
Conversations and engagement have now begun with communities in Petone and Naenae about making Jackson Street and Naenae
town centre smokefree.
“Hutt City Council is proud to have one of the most comprehensive smokefree policies in New Zealand” says Lower Hutt
Mayor, Ray Wallace. “Council is taking a leadership role in the community’s health and wellbeing. This policy is not
about persecuting people who smoke. This is a positive approach to encourage people not to light up in public”.
Making Queen Street smokefree has had significant community support with a survey conducted in 2017 showing that 82% of
the respondents supported Queen Street becoming smokefree with 62% showing support for other parts of Wainuiomata
becoming smokefree too.
Young people (10-16 years) were the strongest supporters with 90.63% of the respondents wanting Queen Street to be
smokefree.
Smokefree places are important because we know that children ‘do as they see’ and we want to make smoking less normal by
making it less visible to our young people and children. They also make it easier for smokers to quit and stay
smokefree.
The Wainuiomata Community Board and Hutt City Council will continue to work with the community and stakeholders to raise
awareness that Queen Street is now smokefree, via promotion and signage.
Support is available to those would like to begin their journey to quit smoking through the Regional Stop Smoking
Service Tākiri Mai Te Ata on 0800 926 257 or Quitline on 0800 778 778.