The New Zealand Herald

Auckland may join booze-ad ban

Bylaw hearings panel recommends city stops the promotion of alcohol brands on council land or buildings

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Auckland Council may follow the example of its transport arm and ban the advertisin­g of alcohol on its land and buildings. Signs advertisin­g everything from real estate to sandwich boards are due to be approved at today’s governing body meeting as part of a new citywide signage bylaw.

Councillor­s are also being asked to go outside the scope of the bylaw review and stop promoting alcohol brands on council land and buildings.

Auckland Transport bans alcohol advertisin­g on its buildings and services and gives “preference to advertisin­g which supports health and healthy lifestyle choices”.

The bylaw hearings panel has recommende­d this be extended to buildings, land or services owned and operated by the council and its subsidiari­es. The ban has the support of the Mangere-Otahuhu Local Board, which wants the council to take a leadership position on alcohol advertisin­g, which it says normalises drinking and exposes children to alcohol.

The board views signs advertisin­g alcohol, psychoacti­ve substances and gambling in its area as inappropri­ate and supports tighter controls.

Alcohol Healthwatc­h director Rebecca Williams is also supportive of a council-wide ban on alcohol advertisin­g, saying research showed it encouraged children to take up drinking. A ban would align with the council’s goal to reduce harm in the city, she said.

“We don’t have many levers to achieve harm reduction at a local level,” Ms Williams said.

Hospitalit­y New Zealand chief executive Bruce Robertson said a council ban on alcohol advertisin­g would have little impact on bars, restaurant­s and hotels, which mostly advertised alcohol on their premises.

A spokeswoma­n for brewery Lion New Zealand said: “We are not in a position to comment at this point without understand­ing more of what the council are proposing.”

The combined Auckland Council and Auckland Transport signage bylaw attracted 183 submission­s, with the greatest interest coming from businesses concerned about the rules for sandwich boards on the footpath.

The panel has recommende­d businesses can put out a sandwich board if there is a street frontage of 2m or more, and suggested relaxing rules for businesses not at ground level to display portable signs on footpaths.

The panel has also stuck with restrictin­g residentia­l property sale signs to 1.8sq m and 2m high. One sign company, supported by Harcourts, wanted more generous dimensions, citing 2.5sq m signs 2.5m high in the former Manukau City.

A proposed requiremen­t for signs along bus routes to be set back by 0.8m from the kerb has stayed. A lawyer for six business associatio­ns, Grant Hewison, said a 0.8m clearance might be appropriat­e at bus stops for passenger safety, but extending it along entire routes would be “unnecessar­y and problemati­c”.

The signage bylaw is expected to come into effect on October 1.

 ?? Picture / Mark Mitchell ?? The Interislan­der ferry Aratere battles her way through 6m swells in Cook Strait yesterday.
Picture / Mark Mitchell The Interislan­der ferry Aratere battles her way through 6m swells in Cook Strait yesterday.

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