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CASTLE MALTING NEWS en colaboración con www.e-malt.com Spanish
25 January, 2006



Brewing news UK: The CEO of British Beer and Pub Association calls for total ban on smoking

The chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, Rob Hayward, called for a total smoking ban on January 23, arguing that an exemption for members' clubs would seriously damage the pub trade and lead to pub closures, according to The Independent News.

U.K. pubs, the British Medical Association and anti-smoking group ASH called for a proposed smoking ban to apply to private clubs as well as bars too.

U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair has proposed measures that would ban smoking in restaurants and some bars from mid-2007. About a fifth of Labour lawmakers are objecting to exemptions to the ban.

At least 114,000 people in the U.K. die each year from smoking-related illnesses, accounting for a fifth of all deaths, and Blair's government estimates restrictions could save up to 3.8 billion pounds ($7 billion) by reducing sickness and death associated with smoking.

The brewing industry group joined forces with the health lobby to urge MPs to support clear legislation on smoke-free workplaces and to oppose any exemption for members' clubs in the forthcoming free vote on smoking in the Health Bill.

Mr Hayward shared a platform yesterday with Kevin Barron MP, the chairman of the Commons Health Select Committee, as well as representatives of the British Medical Association and Action on Smoking and Health (ASH).

Mr Hayward said: "Exempting Britain's 20,000 members' clubs from a smoking ban that affected all pubs would be grossly unfair on the pub trade, and makes no sense in terms of protecting people from second-hand smoke."

The proposed partial smoking ban has been strongly criticised by pub groups such as Mitchells & Butlers and Wolverhampton & Dudley as a "retrograde step", and there have been calls for a level playing field.

The British Beer and Pub Association argues that in many areas, members' clubs such as the British Legion or working men's clubs will lure all the smokers and lead to the closure of community pubs and other licensed venues such as restaurants, bingo clubs and casinos, which simply cannot compete.

It pointed out that 46 per cent of people who go to pubs smoke, compared with a national average of 25 per cent. The group argued that companies that have trialled smoking bans may have seen an increase in food sales but that has not been enough to make up for the huge loss in other income.

A spokesman for the industry group said Ireland had a 12 per cent drop in pub sales in the weeks after it introduced a full smoking ban in March 2004, adding that the impact on Britain's 60,000 pubs would depend on how extensive the ban is.

Deborah Arnott, the director of the health lobby group ASH, said: "Comprehensive smoke-free legislation is the only sensible option. It is the fairest solution for employers. It is the easiest solution to implement and enforce. It is the only solution that protects all employees from health damage caused by second-hand smoke."

The chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, Rob Hayward, called for a total smoking ban yesterday, arguing that an exemption for members' clubs would seriously damage the pub trade and lead to pub closures.

The industry group joined forces with the health lobby to urge MPs to support clear legislation on smoke-free workplaces and to oppose any exemption for members' clubs in the forthcoming free vote on smoking in the Health Bill.

Mr Hayward shared a platform yesterday with Kevin Barron MP, the chairman of the Commons Health Select Committee, as well as representatives of the British Medical Association and Action on Smoking and Health (ASH).

Mr Hayward said: "Exempting Britain's 20,000 members' clubs from a smoking ban that affected all pubs would be grossly unfair on the pub trade, and makes no sense in terms of protecting people from second-hand smoke."

The proposed partial smoking ban has been strongly criticised by pub groups such as Mitchells & Butlers and Wolverhampton & Dudley as a "retrograde step", and there have been calls for a level playing field.

The British Beer and Pub Association argues that in many areas, members' clubs such as the British Legion or working men's clubs will lure all the smokers and lead to the closure of community pubs and other licensed venues such as restaurants, bingo clubs and casinos, which simply cannot compete.





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