A case study of the experience of Auckland Zoo becoming smokefree can be found here.
The New Zealand Experiences section of the website is currently being updated.
We would love to hear from you if there are outdoor spaces that have become smokefree that we don't know about, or if there are any updates needed to current information. Contact information here.
Toi Te Ora Public Health have released evaluation reports on Smokefree Outdoor Spaces policies in Opotiki and Rotorua. Both reports show very positive results such as a reduction in tobacco litter and strong public support. The reports also show promising signs of attitude and behaviour change as a result of policy implementation. More...
On 25 June 2009 the Christchurch City Council announced that it had approved a policy making all parks and reserves (including playgrounds and sports parks) as well as Council-owned events in Christchurch and Banks Peninsula smokefree. More...
The Cigarette Butt Pollution Project (which is funded by the California Tobacco Related Disease Research Project of the University of California) has been established to examine all the policy options available to eradicate cigarette butt waste from the environment and to advocate for adoption of such policies at the national, state, and local levels. More...
A survey of 1300 smokers found high levels of support for smokefree outdoor areas. Over three quarters (78%) of smokers supported making outdoor eating areas smokefree and over two-thirds (68%) supported making council playgrounds smokefree. (Source: George Thomson et al, 'Smokers want government action', ITC survey, March 2009.)
Smokefree outdoor areas reduce tobacco litter by 60% in one yearA year after the small eastern Bay of Plenty town of Opotiki started its Smokefree Outdoor Spaces policy, there has been a sixty percent drop in the number of cigarette butts collected from public areas. More...
A survey conducted by Toi Te Ora – Public Health in December 2008 shows 85% of people in Rotorua think having a Smokefree outdoor policy is a good idea. A third of the people surveyed were smokers. More...
From 8 December 2008, all Kapiti Coast District Council playgrounds and sports grounds will be smokefree – and it’s all about the kids! Research shows that the more children and young people are exposed to people smoking, the more likely they are to think of smoking as a ‘normal’ activity. Thinking that ‘everyone else is doing it’ increases the likelihood that children and young people will become smokers themselves. In fact, over 80 percent of New Zealanders don’t smoke and smokefree parks will help reflect this. The Kapiti Coast joins a number of other councils in introducing smoking restrictions in areas designed for use by children. More...
The study of more than 1,100 NSW residents, including 170 who smoke, found that almost 90 per cent of both groups supported bans on smoking in children's playgrounds. Three in every four non-smokers and 42 per cent of smokers favoured a ban in outdoor dining areas, according to the research, published in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health. More...
The Smokefree Councils Implementation Kit: A guide for local health promoters has been developed by the Cancer Society of New Zealand and the Health Sponsorship Council (HSC). Its purpose is to guide tobacco control workers, health promoters, smokefree advocates and others through the process of advocating to councils for, and implementing, smokefree outdoor public places. More...