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Bill Aims to Ban Workplace Smoking
Newsday
| 9/17/02
| J. Palmer
Posted on 09/17/2002 6:15:39 AM PDT by sushiman
For almost 20 years, Suffolk County has been slowly eroding people's rights to smoke in public. With one more measure, the butts could stop here.
A group of bipartisan lawmakers today is expected to unveil a bill that bans smoking in virtually all workplaces - including bingo halls, bowling alleys, bars and restaurants. This effort is the product of talks with officials in Nassau, Westchester and New York City to provide a regional standard for workplace smoking.
The Suffolk bill would allow smoking only in private homes and in private enclosed offices occupied exclusively by smokers. Smoking also would be permitted in outdoor seating at bars and restaurants. State and federal property are exempt from the county's jurisdiction.
In Suffolk now, smoking is limited to separate rooms in all restaurants. It is also banned within 50 feet of hospitals or public buildings and restricted in workplaces.
Brian Foley, a Democratic legislator from Blue Point, said the proposed ban is essential to protect public health and is also a workplace safety issue.
"Second-hand smoke kills tens of thousands of Americans each year and injures the health of tens of thousands more as well," said Foley, who chairs the health committee and is co-sponsoring the bill with fellow Democrat Ginny Fields of Oakdale and Presiding Officer Paul Tonna, a Republican from West Hills. "This reso- lution is going to save lives here in Suffolk County."
Foley said the proposed ban will be discussed in the next health committee meeting Oct. 2. A public hearing before the full legislature will be held Oct. 8.
In Nassau, similar legislation will be considered by the legislature at its Oct. 7 meeting, said Deputy Presiding Officer Roger Corbin (D-Westbury). Corbin, the legislature's health committee chair, said the bill he's introducing is similar to Foley's. He said legislation being considered in Westchester and New York City will be in step with those proposed on Long Island, but is moving slightly slower.
Since talks among policymakers in the downstate region became public last month, the concept of a complete ban has run into stiff opposition from restaurant and bar owners who say businesses will go belly up as customers opt to stay home to smoke in peace.
John Reyerson, owner of McGuire's Restaurant and Comedy Club in Bohemia, said he expects to lose about a third of his business if the legislation is approved. He said a complete ban would be too onerous because about four years ago the county required restaurants and bars to install separate ventilation systems and partitions to segregate smoking and nonsmoking areas.
"There is no way I'm going to recoup my investment," said Reyerson, who is also chairman of the board of directors for the Suffolk Restaurant and Tavern Association. "They are not going to come here and have a beer and watch a football game if they can't have a smoke. Why would they?"
Suffolk Legis. Fred Towle (R-Shirley) said the ban is too intrusive and takes away people's ability to make decisions. "There comes a point when government has gone too far," he said.
TOPICS: News/Current Events
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To: sushiman
They're everywhere.
Smoking ban debate heats up in Eden Prairie
Mpls (red)Star Tribune ^ | 9/17/02 | Terry Fiedler
Posted on 09/17/2002 7:19 AM Central by Valin
One of Eden Prairie's largest private employers has threatened to relocate many of its 600 jobs if the city passes a novel antismoking ordinance, joining a growing number of businesses rebelling against the proposal.
Douglas Corp., a manufacturer of car logo emblems and other product-identification items, joins metallic balloon manufacturer Anagram International and other businesses and business groups lining up against a proposal, the first in the state that would ban smoking in industrial businesses as well as bars and restaurants. Anagram said a few weeks ago it might be forced to relocate 350 people if the smoking ban passes.
"It's a human rights issue and a business issue," said Douglas Corp. president Doug Skanse, who estimates that 30 percent of his workers smoke in designated areas in two Eden Prairie facilities. He added that the company just couldn't afford to lose skilled workers. Douglas also has locations in Minneapolis and Staples, Minn.
City Council member Jan Mosman emphasized that the proposal, recently removed from the city's Web site, was merely a "compilation" of possible restrictions rather than an actual proposal. A vote on an ordinance isn't expected for a few weeks. "We're all looking to find intelligent solutions," Mosman said. "Some businesses are feeling targeted, [but] I believe we've tried very hard to take input from the chamber and restaurants at public hearings."
Even so, last week the Eden Prairie Chamber of Commerce came out against the proposed ordinance, calling it "unduly burdensome." Trade organizations representing restaurants, hotels and bowling proprietors are also lobbying against the move, with the bowlers' group threatening to sue the city with other parties.
Today, Eden Prairie-based management consultant Paul Wendorff plans to ask that the City Council set up a citizens' task force to investigate the conduct of the council regarding the proposed smoking plan.
Among other things, Wendorff wants to know more about the use of money from the Minnesota Partnership for Action Against Tobacco to lobby the council for an ordinance. MPAAT, a nonprofit created with more than $200 million in proceeds from the 1998 settlement of the state's lawsuit against cigarette manufacturers, gave a $200,000 grant to the American Cancer Society to lobby for smoking bans in Hennepin County communities.
In June, a Ramsey County District Court judge ruled that there was no legal justification for MPAAT's efforts to pass smoking bans; the group's designated mission is to assist individual smokers in quitting and to conduct research on tobacco-related health issues.
Wendorff also believes some Eden Prairie council members have conflicts of interest. He noted that council member Sherry Butcher selected Leslie Ellis, the head of the group Clean Air of the Prairie, which is lobbying for a smoking ban, as manager for her state senate campaign.
Butcher said, though, that Ellis is one of several campaign managers and that they represent both sides of the issue. "It's easy to cry wolf on that type of thing," she said.
Mosman said the city has already consulted with lawyers and that there is "no conflict of interest" among council members. Mosman added that the public has indicated that it wants the city to restrict smoking and that it's the council's duty to follow through.
Butcher is not necessarily of like mind. She said the council needs to be cautious and that it may be an issue for the state, rather than the city, to address.
Gary Chanen, managing partner of the Outback Steakhouse in Eden Prairie, thinks manufacturing firms may avoid the brunt of restrictions, and that bars and restaurants will end up being the "sacrificial lambs." One thing is certain, he said. "It's ugly and it's going to get uglier, too."
-- Terry Fiedler is at
tfiedler@startribune.com.
© Copyright 2002 Star Tribune. All rights reserved.
41
posted on
09/17/2002 7:38:11 AM PDT
by
Valin
To: sushiman
The Suffolk bill would allow smoking only in private homes and in private enclosed offices occupied exclusively by smokers. How beneficent of them.
For how long?
42
posted on
09/17/2002 7:41:04 AM PDT
by
facedown
To: Sloth
People who smoke are uniformly dumb and often inconsiderate That is a rather baseless claim on your part - and totally out of line.
43
posted on
09/17/2002 7:42:01 AM PDT
by
Gabz
To: N. Theknow
A restaurant in Fort Wayne, IN charges $1.00 for a lifetime membership in their "club" and gives a $1.00 discount on the first cup of coffee. It's coming to that. Make it PRIVATE PRIVATE so the business owner can accomodate EVERYONE. They shouldn't have to do that with their business' now, though. They own it, it's theirs.
2 eateries to allow smoking, no kids
44
posted on
09/17/2002 7:46:55 AM PDT
by
SheLion
To: SheLion
Email to Foley:
I recently read your Second Hand Smoke screed on Free Republic. com. Perhaps you'd like to see that the country at large considers you an anti-property rights facsist.
Bill Aims to Ban Workplace Smoking
If it's not enough for you to make up statistics out of whole cloth, perhaps you'd take the time to read that the EPA's Second Hand Smoke report has been thrown out of court because,
"EPA publicly committed to a conclusion before research had begun; excluded industry by violating the Act's procedural requirements; adjusted established procedure and scientific norms to validate the Agency's public conclusion, and aggressively utilized the Act's authority to disseminate findings to establish a de facto regulatory scheme intended to restrict Plaintiffs' products and to influence public opinion."
Court rules against EPA
Or perhaps you've never heard of the Oak Ridge National Lab study which found Second Hand Smoke virtually harmless:
ORNL finds second hand smoke less harmful than thought
Has it ever occured to any of you health Nazis that if it takes 30 to 50 years for an actual smoker to get sick (if he/she is one of the 12% of smokers who do get sick, that is), then it is impossible for someone to get sick from second hand smoke?
You are the typical hack politician, grandstanding and presenting this as a health issue, when in reality this is a property rights issue and you are stripping adult business owners and their adult customers of their ability to make a free choice.
I bet you believe in choice when it come to abortion even though by your name I judge you to be a Catholic. 'Splain that one.
Even you county hacks should be forced to spend some time reading the Constitution and seeing just what is governments business and what isn't, but you're to busy grandstanding for votes and mouthing these meaningless platitudes to your sheep-like constituents.
Thanks for the time,
metesky
real name witheld to protect the guilty
45
posted on
09/17/2002 7:48:58 AM PDT
by
metesky
To: metesky
Great letter, pal. I particularly enjoyed the ending:
Even you county hacks should be forced to spend some time reading the Constitution and seeing just what is governments business and what isn't, but you're to busy grandstanding for votes and mouthing these meaningless platitudes to your sheep-like constituents.
46
posted on
09/17/2002 7:52:08 AM PDT
by
Gabz
To: Gabz
They probably all did - which is why she is where she is and this bunch of clowns thinkks they can ignore the rights of business and private roperty owners with impunity.And they are on this cite posing as conservatives. By the boatload.
To: Gabz
True. You can't call them uniformly dumb. My father has smoked for 40 years, and he's still one of the smartest people I know. He's just addicted. It's very dissapointing to me, but that's life. People do lots of things they know are bad for them, it doesn't make them dumb, it just shows a lack of will. Eating too much fast food is the same thing. My problem with smoking is that the people who smoke where I work go outside to do it in a designated smoking area. Fine. But they're out there 6 or 7 times a day, 5 to 10 minutes a time, while I'm inside working. I don't get to walk outside and just bullshit for 10 minutes with friends. Just because they smoke, they get these built-in breaks. Very annoying.
To: metesky
SUPER LETTER METESKY Keep up the great work!!
49
posted on
09/17/2002 7:57:29 AM PDT
by
SheLion
To: ThomasJefferson
And they are on this cite posing as conservatives. By the boatload. That is very scary. Because they don't' see it for what it is. It's control of other people's lives and livelihoods, which is not good. There is too much government control as it is - we need les government intrusion, not more.
50
posted on
09/17/2002 7:59:24 AM PDT
by
Gabz
To: Sloth
Just a few "uniformly dumb and often inconsiderate" people for ya:
Ah, for the days when the men of this country, whether men of the left or right, weren't emasculated little lap-dogs.
51
posted on
09/17/2002 7:59:49 AM PDT
by
metesky
To: Sloth
People who smoke are uniformly dumb Einstein a smoker? Churchill? Most of the founding fathers? Care to reconcider that comment?
To: Mr. Bird
There is plenty of evidence that second hand smoke is dangerous. Have you been hiding under a rock????
53
posted on
09/17/2002 8:01:59 AM PDT
by
Tazman70
To: Gabz
Because they don't' see it for what it is. I disagree. They know precisely what it is IMO.
This place is filty with authoritarians and other violent types.
To: ohioman; Illbay
"If I am ever around you, I will make sure to light one up." I don't smoke, but I'll light one up with you.
This isn't so much about your right to smoke or his right to a smoke free environment. It's about the right of the business owner to run his business as he sees fit. If you don't like his policies, go to another restaurant.
55
posted on
09/17/2002 8:02:21 AM PDT
by
Badray
To: strider44
I don't get to walk outside and just bullshit for 10 minutes with friends. Why don't you just go with them, instead of complaining about it?
While I am not pointing a finger at you, personally, I have no sympathy for the whining of non-smokers about smokers going out to have a cigarette. It was the whiners that caused the problem in the first place by forcing the smokers to go outside to begin with. It's called the law of unintended consequences.
56
posted on
09/17/2002 8:02:38 AM PDT
by
Gabz
To: Badray
Does the restaurant owner have the right to serve tainted meat?
57
posted on
09/17/2002 8:04:34 AM PDT
by
Illbay
To: Tazman70
There is plenty of evidence that second hand smoke is dangerous. Please post it so it can be examined. If it is good science it will stand up to scrutiny. If not it will be thrown on the junk science garbage pile. Others have posted links to info about it. Have you read them?
To: Illbay
Does the restaurant owner have the right to serve tainted meat?If you order it he does. He just doesn't have the right to defraud you into thinking it's not tainted.
To: sushiman
To all of you selfish smokers:
Its your life you smoke all you want,smoke in your homes, smoke in your cars, smoke in a platic bubble for all I care, but please, keep it to yourself. I dont want to breath it anymore than you want to breath my farts.
60
posted on
09/17/2002 8:09:41 AM PDT
by
Tazman70
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