New regulations from Government restricting the location of Specialist Vape Retailers (SVRs) are too little, too late
say the Asthma and Respiratory Foundation. With 1315 SVRs currently listed on the Health Advisory Regulatory Platform,
and 15 added in the past week, New Zealand is certainly not lacking in SVRs.
Foundation Chief Executive says the new rules, while preventing new SVRs from setting up within 300m of schools and
marae, will do nothing to stop SVRs currently located in these zones, nor will they stop retailers from opening
elsewhere.
"By not introducing a cap on the number of SVRs allowed in New Zealand, the Government is allowing even more of these
stores into our community, despite strong opposition from locals. We already have too many SVRs in New Zealand, we do
not need more," she says.
Ms Harding challenges the Government’s assertion that the current number of SVRs is necessary to help smokers quit
vaping. "That argument suggests that every vape retailer has been set up as a quit smoking service, which is simply not
true. These are commercial operations making money off an addictive product. It’s as simple as that. If they were quit
smoking services, then their staff would be trained in how to use vapes for smoking cessation and they would offer
wraparound support, but that is not the case."
The Foundation is also concerned that some operators are taking advantage of the current lead-up period before the
regulations come into force in August 2023. Ms Harding points to the example of the new Shosha outlet, set to open in
the Wellington suburb of Strathmore within 300m of a nearby school and close to several other schools and preschools.
"There is strong opposition from the community to this retailer setting up there, with genuine concerns about the impact
on the hundreds of children passing through the area. However, the Vaping Regulatory Authority, which approves SVRs,
does not take these community concerns into consideration when making its decisions," she says. "And the new regulations
from Government will not change that."
The Foundation has been calling for greater regulation on vaping for years and is disappointed that the Government has
not taken this opportunity to implement rules that will offer genuine protections to rangatahi. "The intent of the
original legislation was to stop the normalisation of vaping, but the opposite has happened. It is now embedded in New
Zealand’s youth culture. If the Government wants this to change, then far more decisive and bold action is needed,
namely: a ban on new SVRs, capping nicotine content across all vape products at 20 mg/ml and providing funding to
support our vape-addicted rangatahi to quit.