New Brunswick

Provincial ban on flavoured tobacco begins New Year's Day

New legislation to try and discourage smoking is coming into effect on Friday. It bans sale of all flavoured tobacco, including menthol.

Ban will prohibit sales of flavoured cigars, menthol cigarettes, and flavoured cigarillos

Legislation banning products like menthol cigarettes will go into effect on Friday. (CBC News)

Customers at smoke shops are going to have less to choose from in the new year, because of a new provincial ban on flavoured tobacco.

The new legislation, aimed at discouraging smoking is coming into effect on New Year's Day.

Prohibited products will include flavoured cigars, flavoured papers, menthol cigarettes and flavoured cigarillos.

On New Year's Day the sale of cigarillos and flavoured tobacco products will be banned. (CBC News)
Angela Boudreau works at the Brilliant Smoke Shop in Fredericton. She said customers are upset about the new legislation, and think it's unfair.

"The ones that use them are very unhappy," said Boudreau.

Brilliant Smoke Shop has been getting rid of some of the products and only has a few flavoured tobacco brands left for people to buy before the ban comes into effect.

"A lot of them are saying they're going to quit, a lot are bulk-ordering right now, and other than that their plans are to go to P.E.I. or Quebec to get them," said Boudreau.

This change is part of the provincial government's plan to discourage smoking and promote a healthier province. In July the same legislation made electronic cigarettes equivalent to regular cigarettes in the eyes of the law.

Barbara Walls of the New Brunswick Lung Association says the province has taken a good step by banning flavoured tobacco. (CBC)
Barbara Walls from the New Brunswick Lung Association is pleased with the steps the government has taken. She said that of the high school students who use tobacco in New Brunswick, over 50 per cent are using flavoured tobacco.

"It's important to not have a product that's so enticing available so readily. Youth are turning to it. People also think it's a tool to help them quit smoking," said Walls.

Walls said what needs to be looked at now, is the people who are currently struggling with addiction.

"I think we need to balance not only banning and restricting the accessibility to tobacco products and flavoured tobacco and e-cigarettes, but we also need to come up with a very concise and consistent support program."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Philip Drost is a journalist with the CBC. You can reach him by email at philip.drost@cbc.ca.