Aurora said:In England, there is a total smoking ban in all public places. You can't even smoke in a bar or a club. This is the future.
And scotland and wales, and northern Ireland and Rep Ireland
Aurora said:In England, there is a total smoking ban in all public places. You can't even smoke in a bar or a club. This is the future.
Aurora said:In England, there is a total smoking ban in all public places. You can't even smoke in a bar or a club. This is the future.
electricpirate said:This specific ban I think is poorly designed, as the 25% food receipts regulation makes a pretty big loophole that either favors pubs, or leads to restaurants getting "Creative" with their book-keeping. I'd rather it be closer to a blanket ban.
krypt0nian said:Orlando area. Where in FL do they ban it? I got back to Chicago in April so things may have changed. I see a YouTube vid from 6 days ago saying they were considering a smoking ban.
gcubed said:there were studies in NYC and Delaware i believe that showed business increased after the ban.
Anecdotal alert... That being said, the level of people that smoke in the US vs Europe with my limited time there seems to be orders of magnitude different (with Europeans smoking WAYYYYYY more).
adamsappel said:I saw a guy vaping on the subway in Washington, DC the other night. It was initially sort of shocking, since it visually seems so much like smoking, but there was no odor or smoke, so I ignored it. I imagine it will see some initial hurdles, with people not understanding the differences, but I think it will eventually be a non-issue.
Alligatorjandro said:Im in Jacksonville and havent seen anyone smoking in a restaurant.
Statewide smoking ban excluding bars: On July 1, 2003, smoking was banned statewide in all enclosed workplaces in Florida, exempting private residences, retail tobacco shops, designated smoking rooms in hotels/motels, stand-alone bars with no more than 10% of revenue from food sales, rooms used for quit-smoking programs and medical research, and designated smoking areas in customs transit areas under the authority of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.[62] Local governments are preempted from regulating smoking.[63]
Brannon said:I can see it now; either call in or tell the host at the entrance that you want Menu A, B or C, and each menu requires that you pay "x" amount of money, which is coincidentally equal to 80% of the average cost of the meal. You then pay the "Seating Charge" for whatever menu you picked, as it were, and then you get seated and order from the menu that you picked, which just happens to have food priced at 20% of the original cost.
This could totally work, though I'm sure there are gargantuan holes in the strategy, but hey.
TheSeks said:Florida has a state-wide ban on smoking outside of bars. Which is, frankly, reasonable. If you're going to bars to drink, you should expect some smokers inside. But if you're going to a restaurant and the like, you shouldn't be expected to deal with smokers and the smoke wafting from smoking areas into the non-smoking area.
Warrior_Keoni said:This should be up to small business owners but never in a public place. Saw a couple of idiots smoke and toss their butts around. Luckily a cop nearby spotted them and cited them for littering.
Zaraki_Kenpachi said:Eating meat causes health problems to people near them?
Frank "Trashman" Reynolds said:YOU DON'T HAVE TO GO TO AN ESTABLISHMENT THAT ALLOWS SMOKING IF YOU DON'T WANT TO.
TheSeks said:Florida has a state-wide ban on smoking outside of bars. Which is, frankly, reasonable. If you're going to bars to drink, you should expect some smokers inside. But if you're going to a restaurant and the like, you shouldn't be expected to deal with smokers and the smoke wafting from smoking areas into the non-smoking area.
Shiggy said:What if there aren't any because smokers are a vocal minority?
Businesses don't exist unless whichever governmental body within its jurisdiction allows it to. The only private thing about a business is who owns and operates it. Welcome to democracy.Frank "Trashman" Reynolds said:YOU DON'T HAVE TO GO TO AN ESTABLISHMENT THAT ALLOWS SMOKING IF YOU DON'T WANT TO.
Just like you don't have to enter porn shops, christian shops, or anything else you might not want to take part in. Restaurants and bars are privately owned and should be able to employ whatever smoking rules they want. You aren't special so go somewhere else. I get people complaining about public places like subways, buses, government buildings, or their work place... but please stop acting like you need to be babied everywhere you go.
reilo said:Businesses don't exist unless whichever governmental body within its jurisdiction allows it to. The only private thing about a business is who owns and operates it. Welcome to democracy.
Those businesses are responsible for the health and safety of their employees by law.Frank "Trashman" Reynolds said:I am fine with it as long as it is the decision of business owners. You can barely smoke anywhere now in most states, so all of this additional whining is just fucking retarded. It's not even just smoking really... I'm sick of whiny assholes crying and demanding everyone else tip toe around them to their every need. Really, if you don't like something going on at a privately owned business... GO SOMEWHERE ELSE. There are other options for near any business you might want to patronize in life.
Frank "Trashman" Reynolds said:I am fine with it as long as it is the decision of business owners. You can barely smoke anywhere now in most states, so all of this additional whining is just fucking retarded. It's not even just smoking really... I'm sick of whiny assholes crying and demanding everyone else tip toe around them to their every need. Really, if you don't like something going on at a privately owned business... GO SOMEWHERE ELSE. There are other options for near any business you might want to patronize in life.
kkaabboomm said:see Lexington, Ky - Ky being a major tobacco producing state, Lexington being the second largest city in said state, and the ban that has been in place for like 10 years or something. lots of initial complaining and fear, and in the end people opened up patios and...businesses continued on (even bars!) -- it was a comprehensive indoor ban for all establishments except private clubs, like the local Bingo hall.
Frank "Trashman" Reynolds said:I am fine with it as long as it is the decision of business owners. You can barely smoke anywhere now in most states, so all of this additional whining is just fucking retarded. It's not even just smoking really... I'm sick of whiny assholes crying and demanding everyone else tip toe around them to their every need. Really, if you don't like something going on at a privately owned business... GO SOMEWHERE ELSE. There are other options for near any business you might want to patronize in life.
How about you provide a genuine argument and quit with the rah-rah "private business!!!" rhetoric?Frank "Trashman" Reynolds said:jesus fucking christ... will somebody kill me before smoking does?
Frank "Trashman" Reynolds said:I am fine with it as long as it is the decision of business owners. You can barely smoke anywhere now in most states, so all of this additional whining is just fucking retarded. It's not even just smoking really... I'm sick of whiny assholes crying and demanding everyone else tip toe around them to their every need. Really, if you don't like something going on at a privately owned business... GO SOMEWHERE ELSE. There are other options for near any business you might want to patronize in life.
Emergency room visits for heart attacks dropped sharply after enforcement of Ohios smoking ban began in 2007, according to data announced Thursday by the state Department of Health.
A comparison of emergency room visit data from 2005 through 2010 found a 26 percent drop in heart attack complaints after enforcement of the ban began in May 2007.
Discharge data from Ohio hospitals showed a similar drop in heart attack rates after the law took effect, state health officials said.
The study set out to see if the smoking ban had reduced the effects of secondhand smoke.
It excluded Franklin County, home of Columbus, which had a smoking ban prior to the statewide ban.
Despite showing a large decrease in heart attack complaints, the study cautioned against making causal assumptions about the findings.
Still, the news cheered health officials.
I think its real encouraging, said Pam Reichel, executive director of Premier Community Health, which provides health and wellness programs to local employers and the community on behalf of Premier Health Partners. One of the hardest things to prove in public health is cause.
Other studies announced Thursday by the state Department of Health showed the smoking ban appeared to have no immediate impact on low birth rates and as some had feared bar and restaurant sales.
The latter conclusion was based on analysis of sales data from 2003 through 2010 that accounted for unemployment and seasons of the year.
Ohioans tobacco use is higher than the national average. In 2010, 20.1 percent of Ohio adults smoked, compared with the national rate of 18.4 percent.
Long-term funding was eliminated this year for Ohios smoking quit line, which received 73,549 calls between July 2007 and March 2011.
Reichel said Premier Communitys smoking cessation programs were not affected by the funding cuts.
Zaraki_Kenpachi said:Or you could just walk outside for the 2 minutes you're smoking instead of needing to be babied. Seems the only one who is whiny is you for refusal to walk 15 ft. to go outside.
The U.S. unemployment rate is upwards of 9 per cent. You want to limit the kinds of minimum wage jobs that people can apply for if they want a safe work environment? Everyone should be entitled to a job in which they don't have to fear for their health. If there are dangers, businesses must address them by law.Frank "Trashman" Reynolds said:As for employees. They can also decide where to apply based on the practices of any business. If you don't like smoking just stay away and go somewhere that does not allow it. People need to make their own fucking choices, and then proceed to not force them on everyone else.
reilo said:How about you provide a genuine argument and quit with the rah-rah "private business!!!" rhetoric?
Here is a privacy argument for you: go smoke inside the confines of your home, and leave your disgusting and harmful habit out of publically accessible establishments.
Because there are so many jobs to choose from!Frank "Trashman" Reynolds said:As for employees. They can also decide where to apply based on the practices of any business. If you don't like smoking just stay away and go somewhere that does not allow it. People need to make their own fucking choices, and then proceed to not force them on everyone else.
Frank "Trashman" Reynolds said:Why don't you relegate practicing any of your habits I find disgusting to only your home? I have a huge list of shit a can't stand, but I realize I don't need to tell everyone how to live their lives. Try that sometime. It's less stressful when you only worry about yourself.
MutFox said:Hope they ban it from people smoking in the streets too.
Hate when I have a smoker walking in front of me,
and the smoke just keeps going in my face.
usually I have to hold my breath and pass them.
Not sure if any other people have this issue,
but the slightest hint of tabacco smoke hurts my nasal passages.
Nothing else does this. (never inhaled poison, so not sure about"nothing")
And yeah, live in Vancouver,
glad they don't smoke in restaurants and bars anymore.
I think smokers that want to smoke anywhere,
are just selfish people that don't care about harming others.
Frank "Trashman" Reynolds said:If a business owner wants to allow smoking then that should be how it is.
Hah. I love it.Frank "Trashman" Reynolds said:Unfortunately I can't smoke inside my own home because my landlord has decided they do not want to allow it. I am totally fine with this.
And what habits would those be, hmmm? What habits do I do in public that have an adverse effect on your health?Why don't you relegate practicing any of your habits I find disgusting to only your home? I have a huge list of shit a can't stand, but I realize I don't need to tell everyone how to live their lives. Try that sometime. It's less stressful when you only worry about yourself.
BigJiantRobut said:This reads like a strange, bitter poem.
Private businesses only have the rights granted to them by local and federal government. Again, private businesses don't have the right to do whatever the hell they want and they cannot even operate as a business unless the government allows them to. The precedent is long and storied in that regard.Drkirby said:Personally, I think banning Smoking in private business encroaches on their rights. If they didn't want smoking in their establishment, they could of banned it themselves.
Stet said:The U.S. unemployment rate is upwards of 9 per cent. You want to limit the kinds of minimum wage jobs that people can apply for if they want a safe work environment? Everyone should be entitled to a job in which they don't have to fear for their health. If there are dangers, businesses must address them by law.
Drkirby said:Personally, I think banning Smoking in private business encroaches on their rights. If they didn't want smoking in their establishment, they could of banned it themselves.