The Daily Telegraph

Office smokers forced to wait 45 minutes before using lifts

- By Julian Ryall in Tokyo

A LOCAL government in central Japan has ordered smokers to complete a 45-minute “decontamin­ation period” between stubbing out their last cigarette and using elevators within the city hall.

Staff at the administra­tive offices of the city of Ikoma, in Nara prefecture, are being told to either take the stairs after a cigarette break or to wait for three quarters of an hour before using an elevator in the five-storey building.

The new regulation was introduced because “exhaled air from smokers could cause passive smoking and the impact is especially serious in closed spaces”, the city government said.

The office has, however, stopped short of imposing penalties on anyone who ignores the rule.

“This is one measure we can take against the problem of passive smoking and we believe it is really important for human health, especially for children and pregnant women,” said Kosuke Izumi, a city government official.

Mr Izumi said that employees “understand and accept” the reasoning behind the ban, although some of the smokers have grumbled. He said opinions among local residents have been split 50-50 between those who support the ban and those who question whether it will have any impact.

Ikoma has introduced a series of aggressive anti-smoking regulation­s across the community of 121,000 residents, with a fine of 20,000 Japanese yen (£131) coming into force in June for anyone caught smoking on the streets close to the city’s main railway station.

Elsewhere in Japan, similar punishment­s are being imposed on unrepentan­t smokers, while a number of companies are attempting to wean staff off tobacco with inducement­s.

In October, Piala Inc, a Tokyo-based marketing firm, granted non-smoking employees an extra six days of paid holiday after they complained that they were working more than staff who took time off for cigarette breaks.

Lawson Inc, which operates 24-hour stores across the country, banned smoking in its head and regional offices and more local authoritie­s are introducin­g spot fines for anyone caught smoking outside designated areas.

According to the World Health Organisati­on, some 21.7per cent of Japanese adults smoke, although the figure is higher among men and older generation­s. That is compared with 22per cent in China. Last year, smoking rates in the UK fell to 15.8 per cent, the second lowest in Europe.

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