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  • 22.11.2011 Region’s Illegal Tobacco Sales Spike

    More than a third of businesses that officials recently checked in southwest North Dakota sold discount cigarette online to minors, according to information released by the Southwestern District Health Unit on Friday.“We were very, very surprised when we saw the results,” said Tammy Hovet, Tobacco Prevention and Control project coordinator for SWDHU.Twenty-two of 63 businesses checked in eight counties sold online cigarettes to minors in September and October, she said. The data shows a sharp spike in illegal sales, since a check of 65 businesses in the same counties in June turned up...

  • 20.11.2011 Alexandria Tobacco Users Are Unhappy With New Law

    There is a certain irony to it, some have said.Smokers in Alexandria will have to leave local discount cigarettes stores to light up the products they just bought there.At least 25 feet from the stores to be exact, starting Jan. 1 after the Alexandria City Council passed an ordinance Oct. 4 banning smoking cigarettes in businesses previously exempt from state and local smoking cigarettes bans, including bars and buy cigarettes stores.And some tobacco users are not happy."They think the City Council way overstepped their boundaries," said Vonne Neal, owner of Alexandria's Smoke Shop." With...

  • 09.11.2011 Southern Board Bans Tobacco

    All of Southern University’s campuses will ban cigarettes store starting in January, the Southern Board of Supervisors decided.The move makes Southern the first college system in Louisiana to ban all cigarettes products. Nicholls State University became the first public college in Louisiana to become tobacco free at the beginning of this calendar year.Southern University System President Ronald Mason Jr. said the new policy is about promoting healthy lifestyles and setting a quality standard for all of higher education.“We’re going to look at it as the beginning of a cultural...

  • 18.10.2011 New Jersey Considers New Taxes On Non-cigarette Tobacco Products

    Little cigars, which are taking increasing space on area tobacco-shop shelves, are shaped and smoked just like cigarettes. But because New Jersey taxes them differently, they cost nearly one-third the price.Over the past several years, increased state and federal taxes have helped turn some smokers on to less-taxed cigarettes store products, local shop owners and anti-smoking cigarettes groups say.New Jersey has a $2.70 tax per cigarette pack, and the federal government has a $1.01 excise tax it enacted two years ago.That sixth-highest cigarette tax in the country may entice more smokers to...

  • 10.09.2011 Free Patches For Smokers

    Quitting smoking cigarettes just got a little easier. For a limited time, the California Smokers' Helpline is sending callers from Nevada County free nicotine patches. Eligible cigarettes store users who call 1-800-NO-BUTTS and enroll in the free telephone-based cessation program will receive a free two-week starter kit of patches, while supplies last.The patches are an FDA-approved treatment proven to help smokers kick the habit. They release nicotine into the bloodstream through the skin, reducing withdrawal symptoms and slowly weaning smokers off nicotine. Nevada County was one of 34...

Council Considers Smoking Ban In Apartments, Hotels

Carol Riel and her 6-year-old daughter Griffin lived in a rent-controlled apartment in Santa Monica immediately above another unit inhabited by heavy smokers.

Conditions got so bad that Carol had to move the asthmatic Griffin from room to room in the middle of the night to try to keep her away from the toxic secondhand smoke, despite open windows and several air purifiers.

"Our lungs were marinated in the smoke," Carol said.

That's when the young Griffin made a quiet plea to City Council members from the podium Tuesday night.

"My name is Griffin and smoking cigarettes is very bad for kids, especially kids with asthma," she said in a high-pitched voice, looking at the council members from her position in her mother's arms. "Can you please make a law to stop smoking cigarettes in apartment buildings, so this does not happen again?"

Griffin's pleas may have touched hearts and reddened eyes, but it was backed up by a plethora of experts representing every organization from the American Lung Association to the heads of pediatrics departments that came to support a possible ordinance to ban smoking cigarettes in apartment complexes.

Smoke can make its way through shared ventilation systems, even doorjambs and windows, which makes it a problem in multi-family dwellings, they said.

According to the American Cancer Society, secondhand smoke cigarettes has over 4,000 chemical compounds, more than 60 of which are known or suspected to cause cancer.

Non-smokers can get cancer from inhaling these chemicals in secondhand smoke cigarettes just as smokers can, the organization says.

In the United States alone, secondhand smoke cigarettes is responsible for an estimated 46,000 heart disease related deaths in non-smokers, and 3,400 lung cancer deaths in non-smoking cigarettes adults.

Santa Monica last tackled the issue of secondhand smoke cigarettes in 2010, when it approved a ban on smoking cigarettes in public spaces, including communal space within apartments.

At that time, council members requested that staff come back with information on options to require owners of condominiums to designate each unit smoking cigarettes or non smoking cigarettes and prohibit smoking cigarettes in all newly-constructed hotels.

They also requested that staff look farther afield than Santa Monica to see what other cities were doing to contain the dangers of secondhand smoke.

Bans in Calabasas and South Pasadena both evolved from similar restrictions on smoking cigarettes in public places, and eventually stretched into the realm of the apartment.

"First we started looking at public parks," said Sergio Gonzalez, assistant city manager for South Pasadena. "We restricted it in public areas like parks and outdoor dining. We then looked at where people spend most of their time, and that's at home."

The South Pasadena ordinance, and the Calabasas ordinance that inspired it, allow owners of existing buildings to retain 20 percent of their units as smoker-friendly. The other 80 percent or more must be smoke-free, and grouped together to minimize the impact of the smoke.

South Pasadena then went a step farther, requiring that all new construction be 100 percent smoke-free.

Crafting a successful ordinance requires getting all the stakeholders together and trying to meet everyone's needs, said Mary Sue Maurer, mayor pro tempore of Calabasas.

"I represented the city along with representatives from the business community and California Apartment Association of Los Angeles and a number of public health advocates," Maurer said. "We worked closely and listened to each other, compromised and came up with an amendment that has worked beyond anyone's expectations."

It requires the minimum 80 percent smoke-free by Jan. 1, 2012, and classifies a violation as a "nuisance," much like a noise violation. After a sufficient number of violations, the landlord can refuse to renew their contract.

To date, Maurer hasn't heard of anyone being evicted under the ordinance.

The Santa Monica City Council stumbled over the concept of eviction, preferring enforcement through small claims courts rather than anything that could result in a tenant being removed from their homes.

Discussion concentrated on whether or not the ability to smoke cigarettes in one's apartment was a civil right, or the freedom from deadly smoke cigarettes was a social justice issue.

"As much as a non-smoker has a right to clean air, a smoker has a right to housing," summed up Mayor Pro Tempore Gleam Davis.

Mayor Richard Bloom and Councilmember Terry O'Day both said that the proposal to simply designate certain units as smoking cigarettes or non-smoking cigarettes did not go far enough.

Bloom pushed for a smoking cigarettes ban in all new construction, and a review of the ability to impose a ban on existing hotels.

Council member Pam O'Connor, however, felt that the ban could be unduly burdensome on the poor, who are statistically more likely to smoke, according to the staff report, as well as the elderly who might not be able to make it out of their apartments to light up.

Furthermore, both she and Davis pointed out that smoking cigarettes is still legal, and that restricting that activity was unsavory.

"I'm not going to demonize smokers," O'Connor said.

The hotel issue, however, got little argument. Councilmembers for the most part agreed that hotels were already banning smoking cigarettes on their own, and an additional ban would not be burdensome.

City staff will return before the council with ordinance options in coming months.

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