Sat. Nov 2nd, 2024
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The sale of nicotine vapes and e-cigarettes without a prescription has been illegal in Western Australia for several years, but not a single retailer has been fined in the past 12 months.

It comes despite more than 24,000 illegal vapes being seized during that period and the Health Department writing to 3,000 retailers in August last year to place them ‘on notice’.

In WA, the maximum penalty for selling nicotine vapes under the Medicines and Poisons Act 2014 is $45,000.

But disposable nicotine vapes can be easily purchased online and from convenience stores, delis, smoke shops, and tobacconists in Perth’s CBD, its suburbs and in regional WA.

In some stores, the illegal trade is more covert and under-the-counter, even using brown paper bags.

But other retailers, especially in Perth’s CBD, more brazenly advertise their range of illegal vapes by using pictures of their colourful packaging and listing their fruity flavours.

On some streets, it is common to see queues of people in stores waiting to purchase disposable nicotine vapes for between $25 and $40. Often those queues are also populated by children.

The federal government this week unveiled plans to ban disposable nicotine vapes nationwide and dramatically restrict the sale of other nicotine vapes.

Inaction comes despite 2022 warning to retailers

More than nine months ago, the WA Health Minister and WA’s Chief Pharmacist held a media conference where some of more than 15,000 vapes seized from 32 retailers were put on display.

“The message is clear, that selling vapes is illegal, no matter how you do it, unless you are doing it as a pharmacist with a prescription,” Health Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson said at the time.

Health Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson has warned of the illegality of vapes.()

“These have never been legal in Western Australia,” Chief Pharmacist Meeghan Clay said.

During that announcement, it was confirmed a number of retailers were “repeat offenders” and it was promised compliance activities would be “ramped up”.

In the past six months, compliance officers from the Department of Health have inspected almost 2,000 premises for tobacco and vapes and formal warnings were issued to about 50 retailers.

Where vapes were located, they were seized and destroyed but no retailers have been fined.

“The relevant legislation does not provide for fines in these cases, but where retailers are repeatedly found with vapes, prosecution is a possible penalty,” a Health Department spokesperson said this week.

“The department is considering legal action against a number of more serious offenders but cannot make any comment on matters that are in progress.”

Police also have legal powers to investigate the sale of illegal vapes but it is understood the task has been mostly left to the Health Department.

Illegal vapes taken by authorities number in the tens of thousands.()

The Health Department declined to reveal how many investigators it has dealing with illegal vapes.

“The Department of Health maintains a team of compliance and enforcement officers that conduct inspections and investigations under the Tobacco Products Control Act, and the Medicines and Poisons Act,” a Health Department spokesperson told the ABC.

“These officers have specific regulatory training and act as authorised persons to exercise powers conferred by the legislation, they can enter premises, collect materials and records, seize unlawful goods, and direct persons, where offences are reasonably suspected and public health and wellbeing is at risk.

“The officers can conduct activities across the state. WA Police are also authorised under these acts and have similar powers.

“Other matters are operational in nature, not in the public domain and will not be released.”

Teen and school vaping major concern

Watching her 15-year-old daughter sink her precious after-school earnings into nicotine vapes has been heartbreaking for *Andrea, a single mother in regional Australia.

Andrea is one of many parents who are hugely relieved about this week’s promise by the federal government to crackdown on the black market sale of e-cigarettes to children.

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