Mass. sued over vape ban, attorney calls it a ‘death sentence’ for vape store owners

ABC A handful of e-cigarette shop owners in Massachusetts are suing over the state’s temporary ban on all vape products, arguing in court documents that it is unconstitutional, one of them telling ABC News that his seven years of hard work in building his business was “gone in five minutes.” “This ban is a death sentence to all the shop owners,” Craig Rourke, an attorney who is representing the store owners, told ABC News Tuesday. “Monday, they were selling totally legal products, that they had been for years, that were regulated by the FDA,” he said. “Wednesday, if they continued that, it would have been a criminal act.” (MORE: Confusion surrounds the vaping crisis: Here’s what we know and don’t) In a lawsuit filed in the United States District Court District of Massachusetts on Sunday, three shop owners representing seven stores are suing the state as well as Massachusetts Gov.…

Read More

A loaf of bread and a packet of pills: how supermarket pharmacies could change the way we shop

 Gary Mortimer  Professor of Marketing and Consumer Behaviour, Queensland University of Technology  September 16, 2019 Louise Grimmer !”  Louise Grimmer is a Friend of The Conversation.  Lecturer in Retail Marketing, Tasmanian School of Business and Economics, University of Tasmania  Disclosure statement Gary Mortimer has conducted and published research in the pharmacy and supermarkets sectors, and for the National Retail Association. Before his academic appointment, he was employed for more than 25 years in the retail sector. His consumer behaviour research spans retail channels including supermarkets, pharmacy and off-price retailers. Louise Grimmer does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment. On the way home, you wander into the supermarket for a loaf of bread. But before you reach the bread aisle, you drop in your prescription at…

Read More

“It made perfect sense”: Why EARL Canteen climbed aboard Coles’ ‘groceraunt’ train

MATTHEW ELMAS Thursday, October 3, 2019 SmartCompany Melbourne cafe and catering business EARL Canteen has inked a deal with Coles that’s seen it open a concession store in the supermarket giant’s new “groceraunt” concept. Unveiled yesterday, Coles is looking beyond its garden in a bid to reimagine its convenience strategy, opting for a partnership model that will see EARL and national chain Sushi Sushi serve customers within its Tooronga Village store in Victoria. Coles is an unlikely champion for the ailing department store model, but while consumers turn away from in-store fashion, experience is all the rage in Australia’s increasingly competitive food and beverage space. For EARL Canteen, which has built out a network of eight stores in Melbourne since launching in 2010, the partnership is an opportunity to branch out and attract new customers. EARL co-founder Simon O’Regan tells SmartCompany the opportunity came “out of the blue” with Coles…

Read More

Shell Media RELEASE

Is your business ready for the Victorian bag ban? Local businesses are being urged to prepare ahead of the state-wide ban on lightweight plastic shopping bags. The ban will include compostable, degradable and biodegradable plastics and is due to commence from 1 November 2019. This new law will apply to all retailers and suppliers regardless of size or type—from supermarkets to fashion boutiques, from fast food outlets to petrol stations. Until recently, Victorians have used over 1 billion plastic shopping bags every year. The majority of these bags end up in landfill and around 10 million end up as litter, polluting the environment and endangering wildlife. The Victorian Government has engaged the National Retailers Association (NRA) to work with Victorian businesses in preparing for the ban. The NRA has set up a toll-free Bag Ban Hotline (1800 817 723) to provide business with support in transitioning away from single use…

Read More

CEO of major tobacco firm resigns amid e-cigarette backlash

Jill Goldsmith October 3, 2019 New York Post Alison Cooper, the CEO of UK tobacco group Imperial Brands, will step down as boss once her replacement is found, the company announced Thursday. Cooper, 53, a 20-year Imperial veteran who spent nine years as CEO, will also leave the board of directors. In a statement, chairman Mark Williamson praised Cooper for simplifying and reshaping the business to focus on Imperial’s strongest brands and markets, enhancing the company’s presence in the US market and developing next-generation products. Imperial, the world’s fourth-largest tobacco outfit by market share, has been squeezed by a global backlash and heightened regulation against e-cigarettes. The company, which owns the Blu e-cigarette brand, warned last month that sales and profits would be squeezed this year because of the crackdown — becoming the first global tobacco group to lay out the financial impact of the worldwide vaping alarm. The company…

Read More

Schnucks to End Tobacco Sales

10/03/2019 Progressive Grocer Schnucks is the latest grocer to stop selling tobacco products in its stores St. Louis-based Schnuck Markets Inc. will no longer sell any tobacco products in its grocery stores, effective Jan. 1, 2020. The new policy includes cigarettes, cigars, cigarillos, chewing tobacco and snuff, as well as e-cigarettes and vaping products, which the retailer already doesn’t sell. Schnucks will sell through its existing inventory through the end of the year. Starting Oct. 15 and continuing indefinitely, Schnucks will offer double Schnucks Rewards points on all over-the counter smoking cessation products, an effort by the retailers to support smokers who want to quit tobacco. “Tobacco products are certainly a profitable part of our business, but our company’s mission is to nourish people’s lives,” said Schnucks Chairman and CEO Todd Schnuck. “Tobacco products directly contradict our core mission, and that means that they simply don’t belong in our stores.…

Read More