Hospitality industry calls for more time –NB
Groups say they haven't been contacted by province about new law
BY MAC TRUEMAN
Telegraph-Journal
Health and Wellness officials have been overwhelmed with news media inquiries resulting from the hospitality industry's massive campaign to delay the province's public smoking ban.
Nearly three months after the anti-smoking law was passed, and only eight days before its scheduled Oct. 1 implementation, the province has yet to notify industry members what their role will be in enforcing the ban, or even that the ban exists, said Kim Hunter, spokeswoman for the New Brunswick Licensees' Association.
http://canadaeast.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20040923/TPEBRIEF/309230040
Proposed no smoking bylaw sparks another debate-AB
by Kevin Gill
Jasper Booster — aWhile the decision to put the smoking bylaw as a question on the October ballot has been made (see story on Page 1), the debate on the issue expanded during the Sept. 14 special council meeting.
The argument strayed from the merit of the bylaw itself to whether or not it’s municipal council who should be the ones drafting local bylaws.
Some residents said that it should be council’s job to draft bylaws for the town, but the Smoke Free Jasper coalition that submitted the petition and attached bylaw said it was simply following the rules of the Municipal Governance Act.
Coun. Brenda Zinck said she was upset by the way the bylaw was presented.
http://www.jasperbooster.com/story.php?id=117929
No smoking bylaw put on ballot
by Kevin Gill
Jasper Booster — Jasper Municipal Council has decided to leave the decision about a local no smoking bylaw in the hands of voters.
Council held a special meeting on Sept. 14 to discuss the issue, which drew about 15 residents who wanted to voice their opinions on Bylaw 57 before a decision was made.
Council’s options were to put the bylaw as a question on the municipal ballot this October or to go ahead on its own and approve the bylaw with second and third readings.
http://www.jasperbooster.com/story.php?id=117928
Guest Editorial
Freedom of choice is lost
Freedom of choice: can anyone tell me the real meaning of this? Is it just for the chosen few, if the city goes along with the no-smoking law?
The smokers should apply to the city for a tax break for their lost freedom. Of course, this will mean people will go out of town to shop and for entertainment if the law goes through. Let’s go whole hog and see how long it takes for the next law to come in regarding minors in any place where liquor is sold or served – e.g. by law, they would not be allowed in the same rooms, lounges, restaurants and private parties such as weddings and outdoor festivities unless they were in your private homes.
I wonder how long these people have lived in this town or have they just drifted in and want to run the show.
Since I have read the questions the city is asking, I think there should be only Question 1 and this should be a yes or no answer, but it seems as though the powers that be have already decided the outcome.
– George Hurst is a resident of Airdrie
http://www.airdrieecho.com/story.php?id=118280
Dear Editor:
I was very surprised and very disappointed in mankind last Friday. As I was waiting to see John Dockman come into our fine city, I was shocked to see only a handful of people waiting inside the entrance of Towerlane Mall. I would have thought that every school in Airdrie would have sent home a release form and every mother, father, brother, sister, principal, teacher and anyone else who teaches our children in the community should have been down at Nose Creek Park with $1 in their hand to give it to this young man who has run across this great country for such a good charity.
I am sure that out of every house in Airdrie, someone will know or has had a loved one affected by (cancer). Maybe someone can give me an answer why the community and the school system are not willing to step forward and really congratulate this young man and his family for a job well done
– Maureen Hutchison, Airdrie
http://www.airdrieecho.com/story.php?id=117119
Illegal smoke sales charges tossed out of court
WebPosted Sep 21 2004 08:22 AM CDT
WHITEHORSE - Two Whitehorse business operators have been acquitted of selling cigarettes to minors, even after clerks admitted they made the sale.
http://north.cbc.ca/regional/servlet/View?filename=sep21cigcharg21092004
Bylaw burns me up!
KERRY DIOTTE, CITY HALL BUREAU
It's time to ratchet down the rhetoric on the Edmonton smoking bylaw debate and consider some cold hard facts. Smoking has been thrust into the news headlines as two Edmonton mayoral candidates sling barbs at one another.
Robert Noce and Mayor Bill Smith have been doing the slinging.
Smith is stridently anti-smoking, and does not believe anyone should even discuss the possibility of softening the local bylaw when the toughest provisions kick in next summer.
But most recently Noce said, "I don't intend to reopen the smoking bylaw."
So if he's not going to try to solve someone's problem, why waste their time by talking to them with a closed mind?
In the midst of this unfortunate flip-flop, Noce attempted to refute accusations he was taking campaign cash from people who want the smoking bylaw softened.
Why he did this is beyond me.
What is wrong with taking money from people in the bar industry, for instance, who have a contrary view of a civic law?
Besides, surveys have shown Edmontonians do not support a total smoking ban in bingo halls, bars and casinos.
So why should the majority have to live with a law they do not support?
http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/EdmontonSun/News/2004/09/21/637311.html
Anti-smoking lobby breaking rules, says local
KATE DUBINSKI, STAFF WRITER
An Edmonton man has filed a complaint with Revenue Canada, alleging several anti-smoking charities are violating rules by wading into the city's smoking bylaw debate. Roy Harrold yesterday filed the complaint with the charities directorate division of Revenue Canada against supporters of the Vote for Health campaign, which is supported by Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) and the Canadian Cancer Society, both registered charities.
"These are people on the outside of the political process attempting to manipulate those with the guts to run," Harrold said yesterday.
A charity has time to argue their side, but could lose its status, he added.
http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/EdmontonSun/News/2004/09/21/637320.html
Understanding the pathways to smoking
Sunday, Sep 19, 2004 Contrast these two phenomena. For several days the national news media focused attention on a coffee shop in Vancouver that was selling marijuana. Then, consider statistics showing that cigarette smoking is exponentially more costly and destructive to society than all the illicit drugs and alcohol put together. When was the last time you saw a news story about the latter?
http://www.mytelus.com/news/article.do?pageID=community/chilliwack&articleID=1715878
Simply smouldering with style- Movie review
Sharply observed characters make an erotic mystery very seductive
By STEPHEN COLE Saturday, September 18, 2004 - Page R10
Nathalie
Written and directed by Anne Fontaine
Starring Fanny Ardant, Emmanuelle Béart and Gérard Depardieu
Classification: 18A Rating: ***
What would you do if you found out your husband of 25 years was having an affair?
Well, if you came from Mimico or Saskatoon, or anywhere in North America really, you'd probably fall apart on your friends, wear sweat pants around the house all day and throw a series of sharp, easily breakable objects at the rat-hole.
Ah, but if you lived in Paris and had a complacent understanding of the fragility of love, maybe you'd be interested in the clinical aspects of the affair. The whats and whys, maybe even the hows.
Nathalie is also remarkable for its startlingly fresh depiction of human sexuality.
The film is charged with eroticism. Yet there is but a single, quite incidental sex scene. The heat comes from unexpected conversations. The way Nathalie's confessions light a candle behind Catherine's eyes.
Speaking of lighting, the film should be avoided by anyone who has recently given up tobacco. Watching Emmanuelle Béart play-acting with a cigarette could drive any man or woman back to smoking.
Nathalie opens tomorrow.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/TPStory/LAC/20040918/NATHALIE18/TPEntertainment/Film
New Canadian Ads Try Scare Tactics to Get Young Smokers to Quit
9/17/2004
Manitoba, Canada's government is trying out its new anti-smoking television ads on students in grades 6-12. The ads are aimed at scaring young smokers into quitting, the Winnipeg Sun reported Sept. 14.
As part of Healthy Living Minister Jim Rondeau's "rate and review initiative," students were shown 12 anti-smoking ads that were selected by youth focus groups.
One of the ads shows a graphic image of a tar-covered lung, while another tells the story of a young girl who lost her mother to a smoking-related illness.
"These ads hold nothing back," said Rondeau.
Yet a number of teen smokers surveyed said the ads weren't enough to convince them to quit smoking. "Seeing pictures isn't going to kill off the addiction," said Derek Scherbain, 17, who smokes about eight cigarettes a day. "They say it only takes a year for your lungs to heal, no matter how long you smoke."
The commercial that receives the highest approval rating from students will air on TV this spring.
http://www.jointogether.org/sa/news/summaries/reader/0,1854,574641,00.html
Alleged 'Cigarette Bandi' attends hearing for gas station burglaries -PA
By: KATIE O'CONNOR , Times Herald Staff09/23/2004
PLYMOUTH - The man who reportedly dubbed himself the "Cigarette Bandit" rocked back and forth in his seat Wednesday morning during his preliminary hearing on charges of burglary, theft and related offenses. He was arrested Sept. 13 after Plymouth Police Officer Mark Solorio saw him allegedly use a rock to break a window at a gas station and steal several packs of cigarettes. He waived his hearing on that burglary charge but went forward with the hearings on four additional gas-station burglaries.
cigarette bandit in court
Comparative Subchronic Inhalation Study of Smoke From the 1R4F and 2R4F Reference Cigarettes
Abstract:
A subchronic, nose-only inhalation study compared the effects of mainstream smoke from a 1R4F research cigarette to that of a 2R4F research cigarette. Male and female rats were exposed for 1 h/day, 5 days/wk, for 13 wk to mainstream smoke at 0, 0.06, 0.20, or 0.80 mg wet total particulate matter per liter of air. Clinical signs, body and organ weights, clinical chemistry, hematology, carboxyhemoglobin, serum nicotine, pulmonary plethysmography, gross pathology, and histopathology were determined. When histological changes resulting from exposure to smoke from the two types of cigarettes were compared, no biologically significant differences were observed. At the end of the exposure period, subsets of rats from each group were maintained without smoke exposures for an additional 13 wk (recovery period). At the end of the recovery period, there were no statistically significant differences in histopathological findings observed between the 1R4F and the 2R4F cigarettes. The complete toxicological assessment in this comparative inhalation study of 1R4F and 2R4F cigarettes suggests no overall biologically significant differences between the rats exposed to the two cigarettes.
two cigarettes don't harm
Former FDA Chief Says Tobacco Industry Controlled Nicotine Levels in Cigarettes
The Associated PressWASHINGTON Sept. 23, 2004 —
http://abcnews.go.com/wire/Business/ap20040923_1073.html
Double-digit percentage gain in Nevada sales for July
By BRENDAN RILEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS
CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) - Nevada merchants sold $3.42 billion in goods during July for a 14.8 percent increase over the same month a year earlier - and taxes based on those start-of-fiscal-year sales are nearly $8 million ahead of last year's projections.
"The strong sales tax revenues are good news for our general fund after the most recent gaming figures took a slight dip," Gov. Kenny Guinn said. The Gaming Control Board reported Sept. 10 that Nevada casinos won $812.5 million in July for a 1.6 percent decrease compared with the same month in 2003.
The July increase in sales marked the 13th straight month of double-digit gains.
Bars and restaurants had a 7.8 percent gain in sales statewide. A breakdown shows that in the Las Vegas area, such sales, indicators of tourism traffic, were up 8 percent; and in the Reno area were up 9.3 percent.
The combined taxes based on the July sales, split among the state, schools, cities and counties, totaled $259.6 million. The state's share is $71 million, and that's $7.8 million higher than the estimate projected in May 2003 by the Economic Forum.
In looking at business and excise taxes that are separate from the sales levies, the Taxation Department said revenue from cigarette taxes, increased from 35 cents to 80 cents per package last year, are 0.5 percent below forecasts. Liquor taxes are 1.4 percent above forecasts. Excise taxes combined produced $17.2 million in July. http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/nevada/2004/sep/23/092310255.html
Question from reader
I read in a Colorado newspaper that anyone witnessing another person flicking cigarette butts out of a car window can take down their license plate number and file a complaint with police. Is that something Oregon residents can do, as well? If so, where would one go to file a complaint, and how likely would it be that someone flicking cigarette butts out of a window would be spoken to or fined?
— Jenn R., Medford
Just like in Colorado, Oregonians can report a cigarette butt-tosser to police, as long as they obtain an accurate license plate number and can provide a description of the person who committed the offense.
"Just seeing the back of the car is not enough," Medford police Lt. Mike Moran said. "People need to be willing to make an effort to determine the identity of the (offender)."
With that information, motorists can go to the police agency responsible for patrolling the area where the offense occurred, and fill out a complaint form.
If a citation is issued, citizen accusers may be called upon to testify in court on behalf of police.
According to state law, anyone convicted of throwing away a cigarette or another type of lighted material faces a maximum $500 fine and six months in jail.
http://www.mailtribune.com/archive/2004/0923/local/stories/18local.htm
Three businesses fail the tobacco test - Mass
By Carol Britton Meyer/ CMEYER@CNC.COM
Thursday, September 23, 2004
During a recent compliance check, three Hingham businesses were found in violation of laws prohibiting the sale of tobacco products to minors under the age of 18. The checks are conducted quarterly in conjunction with the South Shore Boards of Health Collaborative Tobacco Control Program.
New federal guidelines established a few years ago require that anyone under age 27 be ID'd to avoid confusion. Laws concerning the sale of tobacco place the responsibility for educating employees on business owners' shoulders.
Overall, the board has taken and continues to take a proactive stand. "It's been well worth the effort," said Capman. "We're winning the battle and at least trying to keep tobacco out of the kids' hands."
http://www2.townonline.com/hingham/localRegional/view.bg?articleid=90622
Judge dismisses fines against City Oasis for breaking smoking ban – Mass.
Friday, September 3, 2004
An Attleboro District Court judge recently dismissed four fines imposed against a Norton pub owner accused of not following the town's smoking ban more than two years ago.
On July 5, a statewide smoking ban went into effect, stopping smokers from lighting up in the workplace except for private membership clubs or cigar bars.
http://www2.townonline.com/norton/localRegional/view.bg?articleid=79306
No smoking at Harvard Lanes, really -mass
By Kathy Bunnell
Friday, August 20, 2004
After receiving a citizen complaint at the end of July, Board of Health Chair Sue First told other board members at its August 10 meeting that customers are smoking at Harvard Bowling Lanes on Ayer Road, and that a ceiling exhaust fan is "actually circulating smoke through the entire building." Ira Grossman, Nashoba Associated Boards of Health sanitarian and consultant to the board, duly contacted owner Tony Graceffa to remind him of Department of Health regulations. The owner was unaware of the problem, but said that he would take care of it immediately, Grossman said.
According to Graceffa, he banned smoking at his bowling alley long before the state-wide ban went into effect. The business advertises itself as smoke-free, and is a popular site for children's birthday parties. Graceffa said he would welcome the state-law stickers that Grossman offered him.
Effective July 1, state law prohibits smoking in public places, and fines can be imposed for noncompliance. The only exception, Grossman said, is private clubs. Smoking or cigar bars may also permit smoking. Massachusetts was the sixth state to go smoke-free, and more than 100 cities and towns have no-smoking regulations. Harvard does not
http://www2.townonline.com/harvard/localRegional/view.bg?articleid=71432
Letter: Smoke-Free Establishment
Friday, September 3, 2004
I read your article on Aug. 20, i.e. "Harvard Lanes" smoking. You probably should have taken a few minutes to come here and check out the complaint. The complaint person came out of the ladies' room to smell some residual smoke from our now negated "smoking area." She blew it out of proportion. People wishing to book birthday parties may infer from your article that the entire area smells of smoke, which is entirely not true.
A. Graceffa, owner,Harvard Lanes
http://www2.townonline.com/harvard/opinion/view.bg?articleid=79665
- Should smokers continue to pay the truth® ?
All Former Secretaries Of Health, U.S. Surgeons General and CDC Directors Call On Tobacco Companies to Continue Funding Youth Anti-Smoking Campaign; Form Citizens' Commission to Gather One Million Petitions and Intervene in Tobacco Lawsuits
WASHINGTON - All former U.S. Secretaries of Health, Education and Welfare and Health and Human Services; all former U.S. Surgeons General; and all former Directors of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention today launched The Citizens' Commission to Protect the Truth to convince tobacco companies to continue financing the Public Education Fund. This fund, established under the 1998 Master Settlement Agreement between the states and tobacco companies, provides the financial resources for The American Legacy Foundation to conduct, the most effective media campaign in reducing tobacco use by children and teenagers.
The commission will demonstrate the commitment of Americans to smoking prevention by gathering at least one million signatures to its petition urging tobacco companies to continue payments to the Public
Education Fund under the Master Settlement Agreement. For just one and one-half cents per pack of cigarettes sold in the United States, the tobacco companies can continue funding the truth® campaign at its current $300 million level.
Originally released March 16, 2004
http://www.jointogether.org/sa/news/alerts/reader/0,1854,569901,00.html