Calabasas bans smoking OUTSIDE

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In summary, the new Calabasas secondhand smoke ordinance has been passed and will take effect in mid-March. It prohibits smoking in all public areas, with certain exceptions such as private residential property, designated smoking outposts, and up to 20% of hotel/motel guest rooms. The decision to treat secondhand smoke as a toxic air pollutant was made by the California Air Resources Board, making California the first state to do so. Violators of the ordinance will be reported by citizens and handled on a case-by-case basis.
  • #71
Evo said:
I agree. My favorite co-worker smokes, he is extremely considerate about his smoking. At our building, smokers can only smoke outside the back door and not within about 8 feet of the door. There is a sign outside saying "no smoking beyond this point". This prevents the smokers from hanging around the doorway and getting smoke inside the building when the door opens. I don't care if someone smokes as long as it is not around me.
Our hospital here has a set up that works well for everyone (other hospitals do the same; they know they have patients and visitors with addictions and can't just tell them to not smoke for days, especially if their other health problems would be complicated by treating withdrawal symptoms at the same time). They set up smoking shelters near a few entrances (one is in a courtyard between two buildings and another on the parking lot side of the building...there is no courtyard in that direction, but due to the L-shape of the building there, several doorways are facing that shelter. They're basically bus shelters...plexiglass enclosures with a roof and benches and only open on half of one side. They are placed away from the doors, far enough that I never smell the smoke when I walk into the building even when the shelter is full of smokers on their lunch break, and provides them with a shelter from the elements so they don't feel they need to huddle near the door to stay out of the rain or snow or wind. There are ashtrays in there, so it keeps the cigarette butts off the ground. The smokers are happy, the non-smokers are happy, the grounds crew are happy (they don't have to pick up all the cigarette butts, just clean the ashtrays when they pick up the trash).
 
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  • #72
Astronuc said:
Similarly, there are limitations on the consumption of alcohol. I doubt that consumption of alcohol is tolerated in the work place. Rather consumption of alcohol is regulated by place (a place must have a license) and age (age limits on who can drink). There are also ordinances/laws against driving while intoxicated, as well as laws against public intoxication.
The laws aren't only against public intoxication, but public consumption. I can't walk down the sidewalk with an open bottle of beer, even if I'm not driving, not drunk, not consuming more than one, and ensuring I properly dispose of the bottle when done. In addition to the laws against drinking and driving, I cannot even allow a passenger in my car who is drinking, although I can transport someone already drunk. So, we already have the comparable laws against drinking in public, and the act of drinking itself or the possession of an open container of alcohol is far less harmful to the casual passer-by than carrying a lit cigarette. The effects of intoxication on people's behavior and how that affects others is really a different argument entirely, and we already DO have laws against all of that.
 
  • #73
Moonbear said:
Our hospital here has a set up that works well for everyone (other hospitals do the same; they know they have patients and visitors with addictions and can't just tell them to not smoke for days, especially if their other health problems would be complicated by treating withdrawal symptoms at the same time). They set up smoking shelters near a few entrances (one is in a courtyard between two buildings and another on the parking lot side of the building...there is no courtyard in that direction, but due to the L-shape of the building there, several doorways are facing that shelter. They're basically bus shelters...plexiglass enclosures with a roof and benches and only open on half of one side. They are placed away from the doors, far enough that I never smell the smoke when I walk into the building even when the shelter is full of smokers on their lunch break, and provides them with a shelter from the elements so they don't feel they need to huddle near the door to stay out of the rain or snow or wind. There are ashtrays in there, so it keeps the cigarette butts off the ground. The smokers are happy, the non-smokers are happy, the grounds crew are happy (they don't have to pick up all the cigarette butts, just clean the ashtrays when they pick up the trash).
Same where I work, there is a covered area, nice, with benches and tables, urns for cigarettes, and it overlooks the lake. Nice landscaping around the sheltered area with a large stone dog that is currently dressed for winter (sweater, hat and muffler) that I want to steal and put in my yard. :redface: Damn smokers have the nicest area outside the building. :mad: Of course we have similar picnic type areas closer to the lake and a bocce ball court, but they're in the open.
 
  • #74
Everyone is at least a little brainwashed these days about it being OK to jump on smokers while not getting the least bit upset about other equally harmful things.
You ever stop to consider that people complain about smoking because they can? Go back and reread some of the testimonials in this thread -- people didn't complain about smoking way back when because they couldn't: they had no expectation that anyone would listen to them. Today, people have the expectation of being heard when they complain about smoking, so they are much more likely to complain about it.

But do you think anyone expects anybody to take them seriously if they were suggesting that something serious was done to prevent, say, drunk driving?
 
  • #75
Evo said:
Same where I work, there is a covered area, nice, with benches and tables, urns for cigarettes, and it overlooks the lake. Nice landscaping around the sheltered area with a large stone dog that is currently dressed for winter (sweater, hat and muffler) that I want to steal and put in my yard. :redface: Damn smokers have the nicest area outside the building. :mad: Of course we have similar picnic type areas closer to the lake and a bocce ball court, but they're in the open.
Yeah, sometimes I wish they'd put out a nice little shelter for non-smoking too...for those of us who just want a shady spot to get a breath of fresh air on our lunch break, or when it's one of those summer days when it's raining but very warm, so if you had a shelter to stand under, you could still spend a little of the daytime outside. Office space here is hard to come by, and since I'm the newest faculty to join the department, I'm stuck with the office with no windows (one of the senior faculty made me feel good/hopeful one day by telling me that it was her first office too), so getting outside for fresh air during lunch, or any chance I have for a short break, becomes REALLY important to me. I'm definitely glad they've at least set things up here that when I do get that chance, I can actually stand outside and GET a breath of fresh air rather than a lung-full of smoke.
 
  • #76
While Zoob may be going abit over board I do agree with him that smokers are singled out and picked on. When they bumped up the tax on tobacco here in CA people were immediately working on getting it repealed. The antismoking side made the tax that much more apealing by saying that it would go to education. I've heard that in reality very little of that money went to education. As soon as it was time to vote on repealing the tax suddenly they're telling us that the bill aims to take money from our children with no mention of what the bill was actually about.

be back..
 
  • #77
To continue...

Zoob also seems to be right about the suggestion that it's ok to pick on smokers. The majority of this thread is people discussing what they don't like about smokers with little relavence to the OP. The OP isn't about smoking around children, smoking in resteraunts, smoking while standing around the entrance to a building, or even really about smoking in a crowd of people.
Most of the relavent remarks from the 'anti-smokers'(I don't mean this in an attacking manner sorry) have been more or less "it's a bit extreme".
We're talking about a law that means a smoker must locate a specially designated location where he is grouped together with the other social pariahs or else hide out in their home if they want to have a cigarette lest they get a ticket. They can't smoke in their own car (as Trib pointed out). Even if a person is not smoking around any non-smokers the law is only "relaxed", what ever that is supposed to mean exactly.
Personally I find the law to be quite extreme.
Smoking in resteraunts, there are already laws against that here. Even bars are non-smoking and no matter how hard any bar has tried to get around the law they are smacked down anyway. One bar near here went so far as to make their establishment techinically a "private club" where every person who walks through the door signs up as a member and is made quite aware that they will have to put up with smoking in their "club". The bar has been to court several times and even won a few times but ultimately, even though they must have wanted their establishment to have indoor smoking pretty badly, they are a non-smoking bar today.
Smoking around children definitely should be a finable offense, I think that in at least some circumstances it is, and extending such laws most likely wouldn't piss off many smokers.
If your friends refuse to respect you enough to not smoke around you even though you could have an asthma attack and die you don't need laws to protect you, you need to ditch the jerks and find new friends.
 
  • #78
TheStatutoryApe said:
Zoob also seems to be right about the suggestion that it's ok to pick on smokers.
There was a bit on an episode of South Park about this. The boys are taken on a guided tour through the "Museum of Tolerance" in order to show them the importance of accepting individual differences of all sorts and avoiding discrimination and so on. After the tour, they exit the museum to the following events:

[Museum of Tolerance, outside.]
Tour Guide: Well, that's the end of our tour.
Randy: Now do you see why tolerance is so important, boys?
Stan: I guess.
Tour Guide: We have to accept people for who they are and what they like to do. [notices someone nearby] Hey! What the hell are you doing? [it's a man smoking a good distance away on the edge of the fountain]
Smoker: Oh I was just uh-
Tour Guide: There's no smoking in the museum!
Smoker: But I'm not in the museum.
Tour Guide: Get out of here, you filthy smoker! [the smoker rises and walks off]
Gerald: Yeah, dirty lungs!
Sharon: Go ahead and kill yourself, stupid tar-breath!
Chris: Dumbass!
Richard: Get out of here! [the smoker walks out of view dejectedly]
 
  • #79
haha that episode is a classic.

While the law is a bit extreme I doesn't really bother me either.
Most of my family are smokers and I don't give them crap, nor do I care if they smoke around me. However, there are smokers that piss me off. They are the ones that will smoke and be completely oblivious to the fact that they are blowing in your frickin' face or around children. Those smokers also tend to get quite annoyed and angry if anyone asks them to redirect it or stop completely. While you can smoke it isn't your god given right and you should still be able act with some civility.

My point is that there are some good smokers, but there are also some bad smokers who behave disgracefully. It's mainly the bad smokers that make an impression and lead to generalisations that extend to all smokers. That's why you get people taking pot shots at smokers. So yeah it is OK to pick on anyone that annoys you at a particular time isn't it ? :smile:
 
  • #80
Well we are ALL different kinds of people. This world is for ALL of us to live. I agree that smoking indoors is bad. I agree that smoking is bad. But, being an addict myself, I know how hard it is to quit. Having an addiction is like knowing you're going to die early in life and you don't have the power to stop it. Smokers and drinkers got problems. But, I happen to know they are some of the most intelligent people on earth...
 
  • #81
On the first date with my boyfriend, I noticed he had a cough. I jokingly told him that it was a smokers cough, I was shocked when he told me that it was: from second hand smoking.

I really can't understand how smokers don't feel embarrassed about blowing smoke in someone else's face. I know I would feel very uneasy, forcing my way up on other people.
 
  • #82
Monique said:
On the first date with my boyfriend, I noticed he had a cough. I jokingly told him that it was a smokers cough, I was shocked when he told me that it was: from second hand smoking.

I really can't understand how smokers don't feel embarrassed about blowing smoke in someone else's face. I know I would feel very uneasy, forcing my way up on other people.

Many do. In fact, I know people who very obviously hide it. I bumped into a friend of mine who smokes (I didn't know at the time) and he definitely tried to hide it while we were talking. In fact one of the reasons why he really loves his girlfriend is that she didn't automatically disregard him as a potential boyfriend because he smokes. I'm pretty sure he isn't proud of the fact that he smokes and I'm willing to bet that most smokers now-a-days aren't either.

It doesn't seem as righteous to abolish something that some people struggle and fail to give up. But I suppose we all have some will power and if it results in innocent bystanders no longer suffering second-hand smoke, the ends justify the means?
 
  • #83
This will be an odd first post...

http://www.davehitt.com/facts/"
http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2003/05/16/smoking030516"
http://www.forces.org/evidence/debunk_junk_science_casino.htm"

So let's knock the crap off shall we? I'm not saying it isn't a risk or that there isn't a SLIGHTLY higher incidence of risk. Heck, I'm not even going to say that it isn't worthwhile to try and get everyone to quit.

What I'm saying is that if you want to fight a health risk... find a more cost effective target. There are a slew of things that can be changed, far more cost effectively, than people's smoking habits.

Don't get me wrong here, smoking sucks. I know this. I'm actually now 15 days without a cigarette (and the first person to congratulate me gets a dirty look). Not necessarily for the health benefits (though I've started swimming again and figured my body didn't need the beating), but because I'm on the prowl for a friendly-type female for the first time in a while.

Which segues nicely back to my original point. You folks don't like it. You don't want people doing it because it irritates you. You've managed to get a little bully bandwagon to go for the ride with you. Fine. I'll make you a deal. It's a good one, too. You folks take your impressive little lobbying and "think of the children mentality", and get the freaking morons off the road.

Think about it, and I'm only being partially facetious, health benefits abound!
1) Fewer cars = Fewer emissions = Better Air Quality
2) Fewer cars = Less Traffic = Productivity Gains = Less Stress
3) Less Traffic + More Education = Fewer Accidents
4) Fewer Accidents = Lower Insurance Premiums = Better Standard Of Living = Better Healthcare
Not entirey health related
5) Lower consumption of fossil fuels = Lesser foreign dependence
6) Increased use of mass transit = Less social atomism

You can fairly call some of these arguments specious, but there is a preponderance of value here as compared to banning second hand smoke.

...

But it's so darn inconvenient, sets unreasonable standards, etc, etc, etc...

Call a spade a spade.

To those of you who directly experience health problems from second hand smoke:

It sucks, I've got a friend who cannot be in a smoking bar. I'm not attacking you directly; actually I'm not attacking anyone directly. Life is a compromise and I find it difficult to believe that most people cannot come to a somewhat pleasant solution. I do my best to avoid roads where people drive in ways that confuse and frighten me, you do your best to avoid smokers. I go a little out of my way, you go a little out of yours... No one's particularly happy about it and yet, life surges blithely along running you head long into a grave.


Just my .02 :)
 
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  • #84
Sorry, but smoking is a choice, not a need. If you can't refrain from smoking in public, then don't go out in public. Don't try to equate an uncontrolled desire to smoke with something totally unrelated such as bad driving. I don't approve of bad drivers, but that's a totally unrelated issue, unless they're driving through the restaurant I'm eating in.
 
  • #85
Evo said:
Sorry, but smoking is a choice, not a need. If you can't refrain from smoking in public, then don't go out in public.
:bugeye: So smokers should just hide in their homes like lepers or something? :confused:
 
  • #86
Evo said:
Sorry, but smoking is a choice, not a need. If you can't refrain from smoking in public, then don't go out in public. Don't try to equate an uncontrolled desire to smoke with something totally unrelated such as bad driving. I don't approve of bad drivers, but that's a totally unrelated issue, unless they're driving through the restaurant I'm eating in.

If you can't refrain from driving like a complete nitwit, use the bus. It is, in fact, a reasonably fair comparison. In an urban environment driving is a choice and not a need. Not driving is just less convenient.

I'm fairly certain that the number of innocent people killed and injured by idiot drivers FAR outweighs those killed and injured by ETS.

Don't dismiss the argument out of hand, simply because you don't like it. The uncontrolled desire to smoke and bad driving share many causes and effects. Poor impulse control, questionable decision making, a personal disregard for others. And don't get me started on the smokers.
 

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