
Maurice Merchant, Director General of Communication in the Office of the Prime Minister (screenshot of state media)
Cabinet has agreed to bring amendments to Parliament to clarify the country’s public smoking law and restore a ticketing mechanism for violations, after a recently enacted arrest-only enforcement policy drew public concern and international attention.
Director General for Communications in the Prime Minister’s Office, Maurice Merchant, disclosed the development on Thursday, noting that varying interpretations of the law had created confusion among law enforcement and the public alike.
“Cabinet believes that it is required to go back to parliament to make the law very clear, in particular, for officers to interpret and not for the court system to be bogged down with small matters of smoking in public places,” Merchant said.
The cabinet’s intervention follows a significant tightening of enforcement in recent weeks. On March 11, Deputy Commissioner of Police Albert Wade issued a public warning that anyone caught smoking in a public place would face immediate arrest and prosecution, confirming the prohibition applied to cannabis, tobacco, and any other substance.
Wade had indicated that heightened enforcement would begin immediately, with offenders brought before the courts upon arrest.
That crackdown followed the passage of the Misuse of Drugs (Amendment) Act, 2024, which was tabled as part of a broader anti-crime and violence legislative package.
Among its provisions, the act increased penalties for drug possession and removed the option of violation tickets that had been available to officers since the 2017 amendments to the same legislation.
With that option gone, police were left with no middle ground between ignoring violations and making arrests.
Merchant acknowledged the current approach was disproportionate for many offenders.
“If you go out in public and you just happen to want to smoke for some reason and then to be hauled before the courts, that’s a bit much,” he said.
Among the enforcement measures under consideration is a ticketing system modelled after the existing traffic infringement framework.
Merchant said the aim was common sense application of the rules rather than rigid enforcement that prevented citizens from going about their daily lives.
The issue was brought into sharper focus following the arrest of 34-year-old Jamie Darroux of Herberts on March 23 who became one of the first persons to be charged and convicted under the enforcement crackdown.
Darroux pleaded guilty on Tuesday after Narcotics Department officers on mobile patrol spotted him smoking cannabis while sitting under a tamarind tree in the Potters area, near the Registration Unit—reportedly engaging in a conversation about the very law under which he was detained.
Merchant also noted that confusion over the law’s scope had led some members of the public to believe the prohibition applied only to cannabis, when in fact cigarette smokers had equally been subject to arrest under the existing legislation.
Under the 2018 Tobacco Control Act, smoking is prohibited across all indoor public places, workplaces, and public transport, and extends outdoors to parks, playgrounds, and the surrounding areas of childcare, educational, and healthcare facilities.
Violations under current law carry a maximum fine of EC$2,000 upon conviction.
The Ministry of Health had separately introduced broader tobacco control regulations with fines of up to EC$5,000, which took effect this year.





Are yiu kidding me? I was very happy that finally I could be somewhere without someone puffing smoke in my face. I beg that the powers at be please reconsider and allow the law to stand.
so then stop arresting people for smoking herb. Gaston you need to rastafarian votes and the young smokers vote. remove that nonesence law
u a one who dey pan fuckery bout law stand u kno how dat go affect tourism ya chupit rass
Merchant now you open up a whole can of worms….. Let’s stop the smoking in public spaces totally… you give them an inch they take a mile… Like yesterday afternoon I pass a young man in Front the Tiny supermarket area smoking cannabis. Police presence is needed in the Market street area especially on Fridays and Saturdays! you can’t pass the streets in peace… The loud noise, the explicits the smoking. you passing and the young guys just smoking and all that smoke goes into the passerby lungs, who dont smoke and who suffers with asthma! Its really not fear to us the pedestrians…
Troops I was so looking forward to this being in force because I am fed up of people smoking in the same space like me I don’t smoke and I do not wish to in
No ticket. Fine them. They should respect the public space. Sometimes you there well good and somebody just shows up and start smoking totally disturbing your space