Sunday News

Smoke-free jails proving no drag

- BY IAN STEWARD

INMATES are breathing easy following the prison smoking ban, with scientists finding a greater than 50 per cent rise in air quality since the big stub-out.

Smoking was banned totally in New Zealand prisons on June 1, 2011, with warnings from prisoners, prison advocates, and prison guards of disorder.

But that did not eventuate and Correction­s staff are reporting a number of unforeseen benefits.

Prison services assistant general manager Rachel Leota said prisons had reported a ‘‘calmer’’ environmen­t now that tobacco has been taken out of circulatio­n.

Inmates had been heard on the prison telephone monitoring system telling family they appreciate­d living in a smoke-free environmen­t and encouragin­g family to give up.

Prisoners had more money to spend on things like phone cards, she said.

A team of scientists from Auckland University studying the amount of ‘‘fine particulat­e’’ in the air of prisons has found the rate halved after smoking was banned. Dr Simon Thornley and colleagues set up an air quality monitor in Auckland Prison, at Paremoremo, and measured fine particulat­e concentrat­ions for 15 days before and 15 days after the ban.

Particulat­e readings were already low as the detector had to be set up in a staff area for safety concerns.

Before the ban, the mean concentrat­ion was 6.58 micrograms per cubic metre of air. This dropped to 5.17mcg once a ban on sale of cigarettes was introduced and fell further to 2.44mcg once the total ban was implemente­d.

Thornley said despite the dramatic increase in air quality, the thing that surprised people most was how well-behaved prisoners were while the ban was introduced.

He credited the department for the long preparatio­n time they had invested in the ban, communicat­ing to inmates and helping them give up.

Because there was no possibilit­y of having a cigarette, people seemed to be more able to accept it – similar to how even heavy smokers are able to handle long-distance flights without a cigarette.

‘‘My sense is, a lot of [inmates] smoked because they were bored – and they could. Some staff believe some prisoners welcomed the ban.’’

There were still a few incidents of prisoners trying to smoke their nicotine replacemen­t patches, though this was mainly in new prisoners and those on remand.

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