Thursday 13 June 2013

A Fellow Jewel Robber Writes

I've mentioned many a time before that the vaping lobby are highly motivated and certainly not slow to confront their elected representatives. MEPs throughout Europe discovered this after the announcement of the Tobacco Products Directive recently, with many expressing surprise at the large volume of angry correspondence they received. As a result, 120 amendments have been tabled and there is a real possibility that the silly de facto ban on e-cigs will be watered down or even ditched entirely.

Yesterday's announcement by the MHRA will undoubtedly prompt another avalanche of letters - this time to UK MPs - which I wholeheartedly support. The astonishingly cretinous proposal deserves to be strongly resisted for its incompetent lack of foresight and common sense. I hope others who read here will consider doing just that and demand that their MP asks some stiff questions of the MHRA and its decision to completely ignore the public.

Quick out of the blocks is long time fellow jewel robber Steve W, whose trenchant message to Rochdale MP Simon Danczuk was sent today and is reproduced in full below with permission. He makes some very good points which may come in handy for others who plan to put their objection in writing.

Dear Simon, 

I am yet to receive a response to any of my previous four communications (sent on the 18th and 19th of April and on the 6th of June).  I have, heretofore, been acting under the impression that, in a representative democracy, your job as my elected representative, having been elected to office to serve your constituents, included some form of (moral at least) obligation to both engage with and represent my views as one of said constituents.  It appears that I was sadly mistaken and you do not share my view of this forming part of your responsibilities.  I am, however, prepared to give you the benefit of the doubt on one more occasion and assume that one of your office monkeys is failing in their job to pass on to you certain correspondences from your constituents.  As an employer myself, I am aware how difficult it can be to recruit suitably qualified people with the appropriate level of integrity to perform such tasks. 

I am writing to you today concerning a related matter to my previous correspondence (to which I would still appreciate receiving your considered response). 

As I am sure you are aware, yesterday the MHRA finally, and belatedly, released their recommendations concerning the future regulation of electronic cigarettes (wrapped up under the monicker of nicotine containing products or NCPs).  They are intending to regulate all nicotine containing products as medicines within the UK.  This will have several (if I was being overly generous I would say, unintended) consequences which I shall attempt to outline below. 

I shall initially make some serious points regarding the likely outcomes of this activity, and then point out a few less serious, yet natural conclusions to be drawn. 

·         The costs and timeframes involved in applying for medical licensing will kill off all innovation in a fast moving field.  Currently a separate licence is required for every product at a cost running into the millions of pounds and unlikely to be granted in under three years.  In a marketplace which is both consumer led and driven by ever more innovative products this imposition will be catastrophic.  Rather than consumers being able to assess for themselves the efficacy of, for example, new atomiser arrangements, the manufacturers will be forced to back a greatly reduced product range and to predict in advance which products are of sufficient value and efficacy to be worth licensing.  At this point they will then have to spend millions and wait at least three years before there is even the potential for any sort of return on their investment.

·         The removal of these products from the general consumer marketplace will cost some tens of thousands of UK jobs, many of them in economically deprived areas such as your own and surrounding constituencies.  As I said previously, I have recently become an employer for the first time, but not only will I be forced to lay off my staff, I too will be out of work.  Bearing in mind the current state of the economy it seems very ill-advised to actively kill off one of the few genuinely consumer led growth industries in the country.

·         Pharmaceutical companies currently make in excess of £500 million from ‘sales’ of nicotine patches, inhalers and gums.  Why have I put the word ‘sales’ in scare quotes?  Because only a tiny minority of these sales are genuine, with the vast majority being funded from the taxpayers’ purse in the form of prescriptions.  This arrangement allows an enormous premium to be charged thereby providing these pharmaceutical companies with a de facto tax payer subsidy to provide a product with a demonstrated efficacy in the region of 2%.  This in contrast to an entirely end-user driven market where people are actually choosing to spend their own money on an alternative to smoking which early studies (notably that of Dr Lynne Dawkins of the University of East London, but other studies, such as those from Etter et al. suggest similarly high success rates) suggest being effective in over 50% of cases.  The devil in me concludes that both the anti-tobacco lobby and the MHRA are more interested in retaining their status as favoured pets of the pharmaceutical industry, thereby retaining funding and future job prospects respectively, than they are in actually serving the public from whom theiur funding is derived and who provide them with their raison d’etre.  MHRA is entirely taxpayer funded whereas the likes of ASH and other lobby groups funding is largely split between DoH/other government bodies and pharmaceutical companies (ASH annual accounts reveal an embarrassingly small amount of their funding, as a ‘charity’ is derived from genuinely charitable donations – they were initially set up by the DoH and act as little more than a mouthpiece for vested interests both within and outwith the DoH/pharmaceutical industry).

·         A large number of those who have found electronic cigarettes to provide, for them, a satisfying and even pleasurable alternative to smoking have previously tried and failed to quit using patches/gums etc…  these people will likely be encouraged back to smoking should the devices they have become accustomed to over the previous few years no longer be available.  If, as claimed in the MHRAs press release, cigarette smoking is responsible for 80,000 deaths in the UK per annum, then driving in excess of 1 million currently non-smokers back to cigarettes means that those responsible will have blood on their hands.  If this now forms part of the remit of the ‘public health’ industry then we must have fallen so very far from the days when public health was about preventing the spread of communicable diseases such as cholera or dysentery.  On the bright side, I am sure the tobacco companies will be more than pleased at the prospect of regaining so many customers.

·         Whilst these proposed regulations will make the manufacture and sale of electronic cigarettes within the UK much more difficult, the same cannot be said of the remainder of Europe, with whom we share a free trade agreement.  The recent court decision (which I sent to you previously and regarding which I have received no response) in the TARTU Administrative Courts of Estonia where a similar directive was proposed, suggests that the legal position of such a regulatory framework is very questionable and that at least some EU member states will not face similar restrictions of business.  Is it now considered to be the place of the MHRA to interfere in cross border trade within the EU, or is it simply a desire to drive manufacturing and distribution jobs, as well as the revenues and taxes they generate, out of the UK, as this will surely be the end result of such an action.

·         As well as the above, I do not believe the borders agency has either the wherewithal or the manpower to prevent individuals from purchasing equipment and fluids of far more questionable quality direct from China, where you will find the standards and quality control framework is far less rigorous than our own.  However, I am sure that they too will be grateful for the increased trade and the further job creation that this would entail.

·         As the decision from the TARTU court highlighted, if these are to be regulated as medicinal products, perhaps one would care to highlight which medical condition they are being used to treat, then explain how the pharmacological effects derived therefrom differ in any meaningful way from the pharmacological effects of nicotine delivered via a traditional cigarette?  If, as in Estonia, there is demonstrated to be no material difference, perhaps one could then explain why cigarettes should benefit, by government edict, from an explicit trade advantage over a product which is likely 99% + safer, in as much as it is widely accepted within the medical community that the vast majority of harm caused by cigarettes has nothing to do with nicotine, rather it is to do with ‘tar’, particulates and carbon monoxide, none of which can be present in the vapour produced from a device which generates no combustion (therefore no combustion by products), said vapour being produced from a fluid of known composition. 

On top of these issues, the following would make for an interesting argumentum absurdum: 

·         Suppliers of tomatoes and aubergines are going to struggle to adequately define the levels of nicotine present in their produce, as the biochemical processes within these species of plant are, at best, ill-defined and subject to the vaguaries of both the weather and other growing conditions.  I also suspect that pharmacies are going to have some difficulties in handling the levels of fresh produce to which we have become accustomed to being able to buy freely and easily in markets and supermarkets all over the country.

·         The multinational tobacco companies will be overjoyed at the prospect of being able to provide cigarettes on prescription via the NHS, although, in this instance I envisage the bartering over the medical licence will be quite amusing to watch. 

There are several other issues I would like to raise around this regulation, however, in view of the fact that I wholly expect this correspondence to be ignored in similar fashion to my previous attempts to communicate with you, I shall leave it at that for now.  As a result of the fact that my previous correspondence has gone unanswered I have taken the liberty of copying this letter to the Office of the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, not a step I have taken lightly, rather one borne out of the frustration at what I perceive as a breach by you of your “…general duty to act in the interests of the nation as a whole, and a special duty to their constituents…” as detailed in section III, clause 6 of the ‘Code of Conduct, together with The Guide to the Rules Relating to the Conduct of Members’ (2009) updated May 2010. 

In conclusion, I would like to ask both for your views on the issues raised above and also for your support in opposing the imposition of these regulations, which, if enacted will likely be responsible for in excess of 1 million ex-UK smokers returning to traditional cigarettes. 

Kind regards 

Dr Steve W


14 comments:

SteveW said...

My only regret is that, for the first time in many months I've written to him and not signed off with "...you remain my humble servant...", I don't know what came over me :-)

barnacle bill said...

@SteveW I hope you don't mind but I'm going to "borrow" a few of your very good points for a similar letter to my local MP, LabyBoy Mrs Balls.
Well done anyway.

SteveW said...

Knock yourself out mate.

Crossbow said...

That is fucking awesome! Very nicely done.

SadButMadLad said...

Overall your letter is good and there are number of good points in it, but can I just pick up one point. The representative democracy bit. We elect the wastrels who become our politicians to act on our behalf. But that means that we have told them to do what they think is best and not to bother us as they act on our behalf. There is no requirement for them to ask us about every single item. They probably will take soundings on controversial topics but they are free to make their own decisions. Unlike the police etc they are not our servants. But neither are they our leaders.

SteveW said...

I did worry about that a little bit as it's an argument that I've fallen foul of before now on an entirely unrelated subject. That said, I do think that they need reminding of the fact that they are not, as you say, our leaders.


To be honest, with the exception of looking up the detail of the 'Code of Conduct' it was more or less a question of seeing whether or not my fingers could keep up with the monologue in my head, whilst simultaneously trying to sell e-cigs and accessories to the good folk of Bury.

Tony said...

Great point about the manifesto's, these arseholes promise all sorts in them yet rarely deliver, it should be legally binding.

As
far as I'm concerned watching them fail to deliver manifesto promises
time and again just highlights what kind of people they are.

George said...

Just thinking . . . it would be OK to put an e-cig through clinical trials and then just lie about the results - that's what the drug companies do . . . .

John said...

If you sent me a letter like that I would throw it straight in the bin. You won't get anywhere persuading your MP to listen to you if you start the whole thing with a lecture on how shit he is and referring to his staff as monkeys,


Indeed I'm willing to bet that the "monkeys" threw it in the bin for him on reading that. I would.

SteveW said...

Good morning Karen,

My deepest apologies for being so pithy.

Perhaps after you've dealt with the important council business of fucking up what's left of Rochdale town centre and failing to hold to account those in both the social and police services who were responsible for ignoring ten years of child grooming and gang rape you'd be so kind as to pass my correspondence on to your husband (sorry, domestic partner). In which case I promise to be more subservient and remember my place next time I write.

Boomshanka,

Steve

http://democracy.rochdale.gov.uk/mgUserInfo.aspx?UID=798



On a slightly more serious note, you appear to be suggesting that you think it acceptable for an unelected office worker to decide which constituency correspondence actually gets in from of one's representative. Very rocky ground.


I'll bang in a few FOI requests in a week or two to see exactly where the chain of communication has been broken, or at least how my correspondence has been handled (or not).

Frank J said...

"I would"



Oh! how very efficient of you, after all we don't wish to waste our representative's valuable time on such rubbish, do we? He has many more important things to do, doesn't he? What the public may or may not wish has nothing to do with it, does it?


The sheer arrogance of these people is breathtaking!

SteveW said...

http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/51572



Can't hurt...

Starship Fighter said...

That is quite brilliant. I have just posted my own missive to my MP, the Deputy Prime Minister, and while I have tried to reign in the tone a little, I have borrowed several pertinent points. The last time I wrote to Clegg he passed my letter on to Jeremy Hunt who sent a reply which gave the impression that the Government were prepared to look in to E-cigs further and that despite the need for some regulation they were generally supportive of the benefits which people felt they gave them, and that the UK Government could, if it so wished, disregard elements of the EU TPD which were incompatible with their wishes. I have also just had a very enlightening conversation with a gentleman at the ECITA. They believe that the MRHA's recommendations are merely a propaganda act to try and force the Government into adopting the TPD wholesale. He also pointed out that it is not only the pharmaceutical industry who are agitating in this area, apparently British American Tobacco own the only E-cig manufacturer in the UK and are in the process of applying for a medical license. They have wholeheartedly backed the MRHA's recommendations, believe it or not...

nisakiman said...

They have wholeheartedly backed the MRHA's recommendations, believe it or not...


Well of course they back the MRHA recommendations if they now make e-cigs. They know full well that if the recommendations become law, it will effectively wipe out all the competition leaving them with an exclusive market. The cost of getting a medical license is loose change to BAT, and they are big enough to play the waiting game. In fact, they would seem to be ahead of the game if they are already in the process of getting a license.