DANDENONG STAR JOURNAL
Home » Shisha lounges survive new smoking ban

Shisha lounges survive new smoking ban

By CAM LUCADOU-WELLS

SHISHA lounges will continue to operate “unregulated” despite the State Government announcing this week a widening of its tobacco smoking bans to outdoor dining areas.
A spokeswoman for Health Minister Jill Hennessey said only shisha with tobacco as its “main ingredient” was regulated in the same way as other tobacco products such as cigarettes and cigars.
“However if the shisha contains very little or no tobacco, it would not meet the definition of tobacco product.”
She said the government would not change the status of waterpipe tobacco or shisha under the Tobacco Act – which regulates the banning of smoking tobacco products in certain areas.
The government will apply smoking bans in outdoor dining areas from August 2017, it announced this week.
Greater Dandenong councillors this month passed a motion declaring that a “judicial interpretation” of the Tobacco Act could apply to shisha lounges.
Councillor Peter Brown said it could be argued that shishas’ main ingredient was tobacco, even if it was less than 50 per cent of the product, because it “is what motivates consumption”.
“Quite realistically, I doubt that any shisha lounge would commercially survive if there was no tobacco in the shisha pipe.
“The absence of tobacco would make the pipe content unsaleable and thus the presence of tobacco in the shisha is the significant element, not the quantum of tobacco.”
Cr Matthew Kirwan has spoken out against shisha lounges as unregulated health risks, with no minimum age limits or controls on indoor smoking.
“When a shisha lounge limits entry to over-18s, we’re only relying on goodwill on that.
“If police or a council officer sees a 12-year-old in these venues, they can’t do anything.”
In 2013, Greater Dandenong Council wrote to the previous State Government about an end to indoor-smoking exemptions that allow for shisha smoking in cafes, restaurants and workplaces.
This year, the council started forming an alliance with health groups and council peak-bodies to lobby the State Government.

Digital Editions


More News

  • Police investigate Keysborough carwash assault

    Police investigate Keysborough carwash assault

    Police are appealing for public assistance as they investigate a serious assault at a carwash in Keysborough last weekend, which left a man requiring eye surgery. It is understood a…

  • Wonderful Wills does it again

    Wonderful Wills does it again

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 512659 There were some remarkable individual performances across the Dandenong District Cricket Association (DDCA) Turf 1 competition on the weekend. Dandenong West’s Shaun Weir…

  • Basketball Victoria leading the way with road safety message

    Basketball Victoria leading the way with road safety message

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 492204 Blue armbands will be a familiar sight across courts in the South East after Basketball Victoria partnered with the Transport Accident Commission (TAC)…

  • Dandenong factory fire deemed suspicious

    Dandenong factory fire deemed suspicious

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 528279 A Dandenong factory caught up in flames is deemed suspicious by Victoria Police and Fire Rescue Victoria. Emergency services responded to multiple Triple…

  • Impact through education

    Impact through education

    Akademos Society has spent over a decade lending a helping hand to disadvantaged academic students in Afghanistan and Pakistan through financial support. It began after a group of young Hazara…