Posted on 10/20/2007 1:52:53 PM PDT by Wheee The People
Poll: Two-thirds of Wyoming voters support statewide smoking ban
CHEYENNE, Wyo. - A statewide poll shows that two-thirds of Wyoming voters support a ban on smoking in public places, including restaurants and bars.
The poll, commissioned by the American Cancer Society in Wyoming and other health organizations, also found that 74 percent of registered voters believe the right of customers and employees to breathe clean air outweighs smokers' right to light up indoors.
"It shows that the people of Wyoming would absolutely support a smoke-free Wyoming," said Loretta Wolf, spokeswoman for the American Cancer Society in Wyoming. The American Cancer Society and the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids, a national group that supports smoke-free legislation, also helped pay for the poll.
Harstad Strategic Research Inc. of Boulder, Colo. conducted the poll between Sept. 26 and Oct 1. They contacted 504 registered voters across the state. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.4 percent.
A poll commissioned last year by the Casper Star-Tribune found 57 percent of Wyoming voters supported a comprehensive, indoor smoking ban. That poll, conducted by Mason-Dixon Polling & Research, Inc., surveyed 625 Wyoming voters and had a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.
The new American Cancer Society poll found that 92 percent of voters say they would go to restaurants more frequently or at least as frequently as they currently do if smoking were prohibited in them.
Only 6 percent of voters said they would go to restaurants less frequently if indoor smoking were outlawed, while 8 percent said they would be less likely to frequent bars.
While 66 percent of voters supported a statewide smoking ban, the American Cancer Society poll found 32 percent opposed it. Democrats and Republicans supported the ban at about the same level, 67 percent and 68 percent, respectively.
Support for the ban also remained constant among people of different ages, with support only varying a few percentage points between voters aged 18 to those 60 or older.
The poll found that 70 percent of women supported a smoking ban compared to 61 percent of men.
More than 70 percent responded that they believe exposure to secondhand cigarette smoke is harmful to people's health. Twenty-seven percent of voters surveyed said that exposure to secondhand smoke is "just somewhat" or "not at all" harmful.
The poll results were released while a legislative committee is considering whether to introduce smoke-free legislation at the upcoming budget session in February.
Wolf, of the American Cancer Society, said her group is pushing for a comprehensive bill that includes a ban on smoking in bars, restaurants or other businesses. About 27 states have adopted smoke-free laws but the restrictions vary.
Sen. Charles Scott, R-Casper, chairman of the Labor, Health and Social Services Committee, has said he only intends to introduce the bill in next year's budget session if a majority of the committee members supports it.
Rep. Dan Zwonitzer, R-Cheyenne, sponsored a similar bill in the last session, but it failed to make it to the House floor for a first-reading vote. Lawmakers anticipate a tough fight in the coming session if the bill moves forward.
Dan Hatanelas, manager of a bar in Cheyenne, opposed a citywide smoking ordinance that became law last year. He said he would also oppose statewide legislation.
However, Hatanelas said that a statewide ban might be more fair to businesses in Cheyenne that now must compete against nearby Laramie County businesses that are exempt from the local ban. He said his bar saw a 19-percent drop in revenue during the first 12 months of the local ban, which took effect in August 2006.
"I'd hate to see anything happen, but maybe on a statewide basis it would be less traumatic for us," Hatanelas said.
In addition to Cheyenne, the cities of Laramie and Evanston have adopted their own smoke-free ordinances. The Rock Springs City Council is considering a similar ordinance. Voters in Casper rejected a proposed ban in 2000.
Information from: Star-Tribune, http://www.casperstartribune.net
Plus those killer cars are spewing first hand exhaust that we are forced to breathe!
I’m betting not one business owner was asked, but all the libretards at ScarBucks were included...
ping
BTW, Montana just enacted a smoking ban indoors. Must be something to go outside in below zero weather to have a smoke!
...if the children are so sick and need so much healthcare - make them start smoking....
When nanny statism takes a hold of a state with only one city larger than 50,000 and where the only two liberal outposts are Jackson Hole (rich outsiders and the transient arts crowd) and Laramie (state university), your fear is well grounded.
Limited government is a forgotten value for Americans?
Apparently so, unfortunately.
Unfortunately, ignorance concerning property rights is so pervasive these days that even conservatives fall prey to bogus appeals like this.
Sad, don't you think?
Here in Alaska the 220,000 acre tundra fire goes on and on and on and smoke is in the air month after month. Wyoming should ban that, too.
Like 3 wolves and one sheep voting on whats for lunch.
Look who paid for the poll. That’s all you need to know.
Notice that “majority rules” is the implied factor here - they buy a poll to reflect the “will of the people.” So called liberals are quick to exploit the gullibility of the public who are always quick to cave when the “majority rules” rhetoric gets trotted out, implied or otherwise.
Of course when an honest reflection of public sentiment doesn’t follow the party line say, with respect to illegal immigration, then public sentiment can be safely ignored. Since this stuff is being ram-rodded through, they hope no-one will notice. They usually don’t, but just wonder ‘what the hell just happened.’ Excellent example of how the left runs circles around everyday normal folks.
I was in Montana in August and the smoke from the forest fires was stifling. I blamed the state, but they wouldn’t do anything about it, so I lit a cig to help.
The decline in smoking rates is driven by health concerns and by the negative stereotype associated with smoking. Thus the only way to stop more and more jurisdictions from banning smoking is to remove the stigma from smoking and convince people that smoking in not bad for your health.
I noticed that too - I’ll be minding my own business, smoking a cigarette, and some clown starts eating a steak right nearby. /s
And who polled this?
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