Control freaks
Wednesday, July 29, 2015 at 9:00
Simon Clark

Stoke-on-Trent city council is the latest local authority to jump on the anti-smoking bandwagon.

The report (Stoke-on-Trent City Council approves Hanley smoke-free plans) includes a quote from Forest.

That headline, btw, is inaccurate. If I read the report correctly, the council has approved plans for a consultation. It hasn't (yet) approved plans to extend the smoking ban to outdoor areas, one of which is Hanley bus station.

Then again, we all know where this is heading.

It reminds me of the three or four year period before MPs voted for a national workplace smoking ban.

Prior to the 2005 election the Labour government showed very little desire to introduce a comprehensive, nationwide ban. Instead it was rumoured Tony Blair was happy to leave it to local authorities to decide their own policy.

One day therefore I would find myself addressing a council committee in Plymouth. A few weeks later I'd be doing the same in Middlesbrough, then St Albans, and so on.

A decade or so later we're facing a similar situation, but the issue now is outdoor smoking.

The question is, how soon will it be before an MP or minister (Jane Ellison perhaps) tries to drive through legislation for a national ban on smoking in outdoor public spaces.

Don't give them ideas, I hear you cry. Don't worry, I'm sure someone has already thought of it.

Article originally appeared on Simon Clark (http://taking-liberties.squarespace.com/).
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