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Ban Opponents on Recall Warpath (Smoking Ban - Pueblo, CO)
Pueblo Chieftain ^ | 12/19/02 | James Amos

Posted on 12/19/2002 11:45:50 AM PST by Hell to pay

Ban opponents on recall warpath
By JAMES AMOS
The Pueblo Chieftain

Some sported "Put Their Butts Out!" buttons and T-shirts featuring the photographs of four City Council members who voted for the city's new smoking ban.

Others handed out bumper stickers saying "Fix Potholes, Not People!" and "The Sloppers Are Probably More Unhealthy Than Cigarettes, Vote No On Smoking Ordinance!"

Meeting at Peppers Niteclub on Wednesday, an estimated 400-500 people organized their push to overturn the city's new smoking ban and recall the four City Council members who voted for it.

The ban, passed by council Dec. 9, would outlaw smoking in almost any enclosed place open to the public or to which the public is invited. It would apply to bars, restaurants, bingo halls, bowling alleys and stores as well as prohibit smoking outside a building within 20 feet of the door.

The ban goes into effect Jan. 1 unless the group, "Puebloan's For Common Sense In Government", can gather enough petition signatures to stop it.

The group will start gathering signatures for several issues:

- a referendum suspending the smoking ban and forcing a ballot question asking voters if they want the city's old smoking ordinance instead.

- a recall of council President Mike Occhiato and members Bill Sova, Bob Schilling and Ted Lopez Jr..

The referendum petitions could be available as soon as this morning, attorney Joe Losavio told the crowd, which included many bar and restaurant owners. The city has to approve the petition forms.

Doug Carlson takes a puff from his cigarette while he and Irish Pub owner, Ted Calentino, listen during a meeting of people against the city's new no-smoking ordinance held at Peppers Niteclub Wednesday. Carlson and Calentino are members of organizational committees assembled to fight the ordinance.

The recall petitions may be available by Friday, he said.

The group has 30 days from the day the ordinance was approved to force the ballot question on the issue, Losavio said. Puebloan's For Common Sense wants to gather more than the 3,300 signatures needed by the end of the year in order to prevent the ordinance from taking effect at all.

Losavio and attorneys Jim and Joe Koncilja are donating their legal services to the effort.

"This is dictating rather than governing," Losavio said of the ban.

He said Pueblo residents were "blindsided" by the ordinance, which was introduced in a less strict form in October and then changed at the Dec. 9 meeting to include all bars.

Losavio said people would rather that the city spend tax money on anything other than enforcing the ban.

Joe Koncilja said the ban was "without a doubt the dumbest move I've ever seen" and could just lead the city to ban other dangerous things.

"Alcohol is more dangerous than cigarettes, so why not just close you down altogether?" he told the bar owners in the crowd.

The irony is that people will drive to county bars to drink and smoke, said Koncilja, who noted that he specializes in clients with drunk-driving charges.

"Then you'll have a longer road and maybe you'll kill someone on the way back," he said.

The group also plans to ask bar owners not to serve "the Fascist Four" council members, as Losavio called them, and for people to boycott their businesses.

"We're going to make this the most colorful, most interesting campaign there is," said one of the group's co-chairman, Don Gray, owner of Gray's Coors Tavern.

"It's important that we really make this thing a rights issue, not a smoking issue," Gray said of the group's campaign strategy.

"You are all freedom fighters," he said.

Bar and restaurant operators fear the ban will cost them business. But they were not the only people supporting the referendum and recalls.

Sharon Radacy, who gathered people's names at the door, said only about half the crowd were bar or restaurants proprietors.

She herself isn't one either, she said. She sells insurance, much of it to bars and restaurants, so "it's a trickle-down effect," she said.


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Business/Economy; Extended News; Government; Politics/Elections; US: Colorado
KEYWORDS: antismoking; pufflist; smoking
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To: Madame Dufarge
Maybe he ment Drain Bamage.
61 posted on 03/19/2003 2:57:47 PM PST by Leisler
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To: Hell to pay
I hope a lot of other communities are watching, there is a good lesson here............ you can indeed fight City Hall.
62 posted on 03/19/2003 7:42:17 PM PST by Great Dane
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To: SheLion; Hell to pay
It was even funnier when Occhiato complained that Puebloan's For Common Sense in Government were calling and harrassing his business customers. Not like he didn't harrass bar owners' customers and the bar owners themselves in the first dang place with this stupid legislation.
63 posted on 03/20/2003 5:23:54 PM PST by lockjaw02 ("The phenomenon of corruption is like the garbage. It has to be removed daily." -Ignacio)
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To: *puff_list; SheLion; Just another Joe; Great Dane; Max McGarrity; Tumbleweed_Connection; ...
Tuesday March 25th, 2003

City voters to decide smoking ban
By JAMES AMOS
The Pueblo Chieftain

Pueblo voters will decide the fate of the controversial smoking ban and whether to recall two of the City Council members who adopted it.

Council members voted 4-3 Monday night against a compromise resolution that would have repealed the currently adopted ban and replaced it with a softened version.

The anti-ban group Puebloans for Common Sense in Government had agreed to drop its recall push if council would pass the compromise.

But council member Randy Thurston, who had voted against the ban in December, voted Monday to let the voters decide the issue. He said the compromise wasn't a real compromise because it was written only by officials from the city and the group of bar owners and others fighting the ban.

Members of the anti-smoking group that first asked for the ban weren't part of the compromise talks, he said.

Council member Bob Schilling, who had voted for the ban, voted Monday to repeal the ban and adopt the compromise. He said he had helped try to get compromise talks going and felt the ongoing controversy wasn't helping Pueblo's image.

At the same time, he said anti-smokers could petition to get a ban they liked put on the ballot, and that he'd sign the petition, too.

"I'll be damned if I do and damned if I don't," Schilling said.

Otherwise, the votes mirrored those of the original ban when council passed it in December. Bill Sova, Ted Lopez Jr. and Mike Occhiato voted against dropping the ban or adopting the compromise. Pat Avalos and Al Gurule voted to get rid of the ban and pass the compromise.

A special election was set for April 22 for the ban referendum and the recall election.

But the election may not take place for a while because Common Sense says it may file suit to get Schilling and Lopez included in the recall election. Joe Losavio, a Common Sense attorney, said the group has a good legal case against the city's decision to increase the number of petition signatures needed to force the recall election.

Petitions against Schilling and Lopez were short by less than the city-ordered increase.

Losavio also took issue with Thurston's claim that anti-smokers weren't part of the compromise talks. He said they stayed out of the talks on purpose.

A large contingent from Citizens for a Healthier Pueblo, the latest name for the group that has pushed for the smoking ban, applauded speakers who urged council members to let the city's voters decide on the ban.

They also complained about Chieftain Publisher Robert Rawlings' attempts to get a compromise measure written, but Occhiato said Rawlings was just acting as an advocate for the community.

The ban outlawed smoking in almost all indoor places open to the public, including bars, restaurants, bowling alleys and bingo halls. It also guaranteed all employees the right to a smoke-free workplace.

It has been suspended since January pending a decision by council on wether to let it go to an election or be repealed.

Former council member Faye Kastelic said a vote was the only way to close the issue.

"It's not right that the citizens of this town do not get to vote," she said. "It cannot end without a vote of the people."

Thurston agreed, saying that adopting the Common Sense-authored compromise would leave a whole segment of the city feeling slighted.

"It doesn't unite this community," Thurston said. "It further divides this community."

Pro-ban speakers and council members Sova, Lopez and Occhiato noted that the original Common Sense petitions filed against the ban demanded that voters be allowed to have their say on it.

Occhiato, who last week indicated that he would support the compromise, said Monday night that the details of the measure, and some more thinking, changed his mind.

Occhiato spent some time describing the sometimes vicious criticism aimed at him and other supporters of the ban. He said he has been refused service at restaurants and seen photos of himself and the other council members who voted for the ban posted on a dartboard.

A Pueblo representative of the American Lung Association, who helped push for the ban, was threatened with being tarred and feathered, he said.

After recounting his Naval flying experiences with a malfunctioning aircraft, and military or maritime situations faced by Schilling and Lopez, Occhiato said ban critics had no right to treat the council members "as POWs in our own community."

Occhiato had been working for a compromise and felt that the ban passed in December was too strict, he said. But the measure offered Monday made him feel "like I'm being forced to sign a germ warfare confession.

"I think I would not be able to look at myself in the mirror in the morning if I supported the compromise," he said. "So let this issue go to the people, where it belongs."

64 posted on 03/25/2003 6:08:23 PM PST by Hell to pay
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To: All

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65 posted on 03/25/2003 6:08:37 PM PST by Bob J
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To: Hell to pay
The compromise ordinance would've allowed smoking in bars and in physically separated areas of restaurants, bowling alleys and bingo halls. The designated smoking areas must have had separate ventilation systems, but business owners could've applied for a three-year exemption if getting the walls and circulation systems pose "undue burdensome expenses."

Under terms of the compromise, bars couldn't have made more than 40 percent of their income from the sale of food and still get exempted. Bars attached to restaurants would have had to be considered designated smoking areas and separated by walls and a different ventilation system.

The proposed compromise still guaranteed employees a smoke-free workplace, but allowed smoking in private offices and other places not used by other employees. It also didn't apply to workers in bars and those working in designated smoking areas.

The compromise also removed non-retaliation language in the 2002 law that kept business owners and managers from firing or disciplining workers who insisted on smoke-free workplaces. The 2002 ban also forbid employers from not hiring someone just because they didn't want to work around tobacco smoke.

66 posted on 03/25/2003 6:11:51 PM PST by Hell to pay
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To: Hell to pay
HTP, now you've REALLY got your work cut out for you. Guaranteed the national snake oil pitchmen will be out in force, throwing money at the pro-talibanners and helping them deceive the public. Just like in Florida. These snakes are reprehensible and absolutely relentless.
67 posted on 03/25/2003 6:18:58 PM PST by Max McGarrity (Anti-smokers--still the bullies in the playground they always were.)
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To: Hell to pay
Occhiato spent some time describing the sometimes vicious criticism aimed at him and other supporters of the ban. He said he has been refused service at restaurants and seen photos of himself and the other council members who voted for the ban posted on a dartboard.

My heart bleeds for him - I applaud the restaurants that have refused him service. I don't know about in Pueblo, but most everywhere else I've been I'm very familiar with a sign that states "We Reserve the Right to REFUSE Service to Anyone." And his face on a dartboard - hey freedom of speech is a wonderful thing!!!!

A Pueblo representative of the American Lung Association, who helped push for the ban, was threatened with being tarred and feathered, he said.

Oh, for shame, someone spoke their mind and the poor little antis go running scared. Poor widdle babies.

After recounting his Naval flying experiences with a malfunctioning aircraft, and military or maritime situations faced by Schilling and Lopez, Occhiato said ban critics had no right to treat the council members "as POWs in our own community."

But I'm sure he finds it perfectly acceptable to not even give smokers the accepted treatment of POWs. Tyrrants do not believe in the edicts of the Geneva Convention and that is exactly how he and his proponents are treating smokers - worse than POWs and even worse than second class citizens.

You all deserve a major round of applause for the work you have done. Good job.

68 posted on 03/25/2003 6:23:17 PM PST by Gabz (anti-smokers speak with forked tongue.)
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To: Hell to pay
Funny watching politicians squirm!
69 posted on 03/25/2003 6:32:13 PM PST by Judith Anne (God bless our soldiers with swift victory...)
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To: Max McGarrity
You know they will, and they probably will spend so much more than the Common Sense group could ever raise.

However there's definitely a decent chance this ban won't pass here, Max. It's estimated that 35% to 40% of this city smokes, the highest rate in the state. The likely voters are going to be the smokers also.




70 posted on 03/25/2003 6:33:43 PM PST by Hell to pay
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To: Judith Anne
Funny watching politicians squirm!

Funny watching politicians lie!

Occhiato lied to the public in the local paper saying he supported the compromise, and would vote for it. The Monday council meeting was not as packed as it would have been.

71 posted on 03/25/2003 6:44:01 PM PST by Hell to pay
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To: Hell to pay
Occhiato spent some time describing the sometimes vicious criticism aimed at him and other supporters of the ban. He said he has been refused service at restaurants and seen photos of himself and the other council members who voted for the ban posted on a dartboard.

WAHHHHH!

72 posted on 03/26/2003 4:38:13 AM PST by Just another Joe (FReeping can be addictive and helpful to your mental health)
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To: *puff_list; SheLion; Just another Joe; Great Dane; Max McGarrity; Tumbleweed_Connection; ...
May 16, 2003
Recall, ban only issues on the ballot

Voters next Tuesday make their choices known on 16 candidates, four City Council members and a ballot question.

Voters will be asked if they want to recall council members Bill Sova, Mike Occhiato, Ted Lopez Jr. or Bob Schilling.

Upon answering either "yes" or "no" on recalling a particular councilman, voters may then cast a vote for the challenger they prefer to replace him.

If a voter does not cast a "yes" or "no" vote for recalling a particular councilman, their vote for a replacement candidate will not be counted.

A field of 16 candidates is seeking to replace the four incumbents. The four councilmen were targeted for recall because of their votes for a ban on smoking in most indoor places open to the public.

Voters also will be asked if they are "for" or "against" adopting the smoking ban.

73 posted on 05/17/2003 12:01:11 PM PDT by Hell to pay
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To: Hell to pay
Put on some type of media blitz about what the smoking ban really says and what it will really do to businesses.
74 posted on 05/17/2003 2:35:46 PM PDT by Just another Joe (FReeping can be addictive and helpful to your mental health)
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To: Hell to pay
Thanks for the update! ;-D
75 posted on 05/17/2003 3:25:38 PM PDT by Judith Anne
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To: Hell to pay; Just another Joe
All the best to you.

Joe's got a good point - can you get a splash going for Monday and tuesday?
76 posted on 05/17/2003 3:28:00 PM PDT by Gabz (This is a test, just a test, if this were a real tag..................)
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To: Hell to pay
It's amazing to me how many rights we allow to be stripped from us; everyday more and more freedoms are taken away, none are added. In a short period, we will be nothing but prisoners in this great U.S. of A. Soon enough, and this is for the non-smokers, you will not be allowed to eat ho-hos or twinkies, or fried foods, and if you have B.O., well then you'd better go home and clean up because the smell bothers me. Is this America or do I need to move to a "free" country??? I used to live in Pueblo and worked at Gray's Coors Tavern and is not a bar a place where you go to relax? Smoke 'em if you got 'em. Let's try to keep as much freedom as we can people.

Dave
77 posted on 05/26/2003 6:07:11 PM PDT by bleu71 (A little freedom)
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