Smoking Ban: First Bars and Bowling Alleys, Now the Beach?

rockin'robin

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Mayor Bloomberg Ponders Extending New York City Smoking Ban to Parks and Beaches

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg is considering one of the widest smoking bans ever, extending the prohibition to the great outdoors.

Already illegal in New York City restaurants and bars, smoking would be verboten in city parks and beaches if the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene has its way.

The proposal is aimed at cleaning up the city's cigarette butt-strewn outdoor spaces and clearing secondhand smoke in the wake of findings that non-smoking New Yorkers have the nation's highest level of a tobacco byproduct in their blood, advocates said.

"When you ask people in our parks and beaches," Bloomberg said at a news conference, "they say they just don't want smokers there."

The New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene has suggested updating the ban to Mayor Bloomberg because of the negative effects smoking has on New Yorkers' health. Jessica Scaperotti, a deputy press secretary for the mayor's office, said Bloomberg is waiting for additional information before making a decision, but noted that "it is something he's leaning towards."

Other places have enacted similar ordinances. Earlier this year, Los Angeles banned smoking within 10 feet of outdoor dining areas. The city of Calabasas, Calif., has passed an ordinance that prohibits lighting up anywhere in the city where another person is within 25 feet of the smoker. Nearly 400 colleges have banned smoking on their campuses, and the Navy has banned it on submarines.

Reducing secondhand smoke is a large motivator for extending the New York City ban. "Non-smoking New York City residents tend to have more cotinine, which is a byproduct of tobacco, in their blood than nonsmokers in other parts of the country," Scaperotti said.

Susan Craig, press secretary for the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, said there were additional motivating factors for extending the ban.

"It's modeling behavior for children when they see adults smoking," Craig said.

"Also, it contributes to the litter," Craig said. "People treat beaches like ashtrays."

Dr. Thomas Farley, the city's health commissioner, echoed that statement and said that such a ban could save the city millions of dollars in garbage cleanup costs.

New York City Smoking Ban May Cover Great Outdoors
Still, the potential health benefits that could come from further banning smoking and therefore reducing exposure to secondhand smoke are the most important.

"Smoking kills 7,500 New Yorkers every year," Craig said. She noted that smoking and related illnesses make up the leading preventable cause of death for New Yorkers.
Earlier this spring, the California state legislature passed a law that would have banned smoking in state parks and beaches, but Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed the bill.

Audrey Silk, founder of a smokers' rights group called New York City Citizens Lobbying Against Smoking Harassment, described the proposal as "laughable."

"Evidence of exposure is not equivalent to harm," she said. "There is absolutely no evidence that a whiff of smoke outdoors is going to harm anyone."

Silk said proposals like this one go beyond protecting citizens' health.

"This is all about the incremental steps…to eliminate smoking without criminalizing tobacco." Silk said.

Craig said she thought the proposal might encounter opposition at first, but it would eventually become the norm.

"People were concerned about not smoking in bars and restaurants and now its been widely accepted," Craig said. "Most New Yorkers welcome it."

New York Mayor Bloomberg Considers Banning Smoking in Parks and Beaches - ABC News
 
good!!!! these smokers are incredibly inconsiderate. They throw away their cigarette wherever they pleased. The animals eat it and die from it.
 
I am glad to see more places banning smoking in public places. I appreciate how much nicer places here are with clean air. I remember when I was younger and the mall was filled with smoke. Yeahhhh much better now!
 

Animals eat cigarettes? WTF? I thought they would smell first and then refuse to eat.

Santa Cruz beaches ban smoking due to family friendly beach zone. Poor those smokers have to walk out of beach to smoke and come back in. :laugh2:
 
Animals eat cigarettes? WTF? I thought they would smell first and then refuse to eat.

Santa Cruz beaches ban smoking due to family friendly beach zone. Poor those smokers have to walk out of beach to smoke and come back in. :laugh2:
:laugh2:
 
Animals eat cigarettes? WTF? I thought they would smell first and then refuse to eat.

Santa Cruz beaches ban smoking due to family friendly beach zone. Poor those smokers have to walk out of beach to smoke and come back in. :laugh2:

the same way that turtle wears the 6-pack plastic rings

http://www.adoptabeach.org.uk/pages/page.php?cust_id=42
Worldwide, cigarette litter is the most common item found on beaches with millions being found on beaches all over the world on just one clean-up weekend.

Cigarette butts have been found in the stomachs of some marine species and can persist in the environment for many years.

An estimated several trillion cigarette butts enter the environment every year (Cigarette litter organisation, 2007).

Cigarette filters are not biodegradable as commonly thought. The filters are made from cellulose acetate, a type of plastic, and persist in the environment for many years. Cigarette filters also contain tobacco, a powerful insecticide. Estimates of the time it takes for a cigarette filter to degrade at sea vary from 12-15 years. Cigarette butts dropped in the street can be washed down into drains by rain and the butts can then be washed out to sea.

Cigarette filters are designed to absorb some of the tar and chemicals found in cigarettes such as cadmium, lead and arsenic. however once the filter enters the marine environment these toxic chemicals are leached out into the water. Cigarette ends can be mistaken for food and ingested by marine animals. They have been found in the guts of whales, dolphins, sea birds and turtles. Once ingested toxic chemicals can enter the blood stream and cause irritation of the gut. A false sense of satiation may be felt by the animal leading to a lower fitness and if the gut becomes blocked the animal can starve to death. Studies have shown that one cigarette filter is toxic enough to kill water fleas Daphnia magna in 8 litres of water (Register, 2000).
 
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The No Butts About It Campaign

This campaign was started in 1996 by three young siblings to raise awareness and provide solutions to cigarette litter. Smokers can easily - and happily - dispose of their butts in appropriate ash receptacles instead of tossing them out car windows or on the ground. The problem is that most smokers do not even think that their actions in tossing a butt to the ground is littering - it's just how they have always disposed of the cigarette. Once awareness is raised, most smokers are caring and considerate enough to change their conduct. Raising awareness is the biggest key to resolving this problem. So we created an awareness poster with important facts about cigarette litter. For instance:

It can take up to 25 years for one cigarette to biodegrade.
Cigarettes are littered on average 142 times per second.
Eighty percent of the 4,500,000,000 (!) littered annually worldwide find their way into water systems, causing a deterioration of overall quality.
The cigarettes littered in one year alone worldwide can go from the moon to the earth almost 300 times
Littered cigarettes are responsible for destructive fires that have caused vast amounts of property damage and wreaked havoc on many lives.
Property maintenance costs are greatly reduced by reducing cigarette litter
Cigarette litter has been the most littered item recovered every year during the International Coastal Cleanup by more than two to one
 
that sucks. *knock on wood* I ll make sure that my kids know how nasty habit of smoking it as i have witness many people all my life is nasty.
 
It's about time though, people have a tendency to toss cigarette butts wherever they go. Ugh.
 
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