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Posts Tagged ‘smoking areas’

Premium Smoking Areas Opened in Tokyo

Friday, August 24th, 2019

Japan is one of the more cigarettes-friendly countries in the world; there are no ordinances banning cigs in buildings, and the smoking rate stays high. That said, more and more public places are starting to prohibit cigarettes, so places like train stations very often have gathered smoking places where inhabitants struggle to breathe. As an alternative to these, a new company called Ippuku (“puff”) is opening new public smoking areas around Tokyo that use contactless smart card technology for payments.

Smokers will now pay ¥50 (approximately $0.64) a time with their Suica or Pasmo passes, both of which are common forms of electronic money in Tokyo that use the Sony-developed FeliCa RFID system. The cards can also be used even for public transportation, vending machines, and payments at convenience shops. Ippuku’s pay-as-you-go rooms have subway-stile gates where clients must touch their cards to enter; in an interview with Nikkei Trendy, a company representative declared that the use of smart IC cards will help encourage inhabitants to come to the rooms without feeling lack or having to search around for a coin.

Once inside, the rooms have Wi-Fi, TV, and power exits, and the company seems assure that its new combination of ventilation, aroma sprays, and water-based special processing system for cigarettes butts will create a very comfortable atmosphere. Right now there are three Ippuku special rooms in the Chiyoda-ku area of Tokyo, which has a history of advertising smoking labels — it was actually the first place in Japan to prohibit smoking in the streets a decade ago. Ippuku is thinking outside Chiyoda, however, and the new plan is to open 36 more rooms in the next three years with a focus on business areas.

Smoke-Free Buenos Aires City

Thursday, January 5th, 2019

The City Government put forward the measure in a bid to ensure all closed public areas in the Capital are completely smoke-free. The amendments were finalised late Thursday night, to the law that was voted in December 2017, bringing vast changes to Buenos Aires cafe culture, as those who smoke tax free Leana cigarette will now have to go outside.

Bars and restaurants that constructed special smoking areas within their premises as early as 2005 (when article 21 of law 1799 insisted tobacco controls must be put in place) will now be left slightly astray due to the new measures taken by the administration of Buenos Aires City.

According to official sources, most downtown bars and restaurants already closed these areas, since they put other customers and café/bar staff at risk of passive, after the anti-tobacco laws were passed last year.
However for those that hadn’t, now will be their time to do so in the latest move by the Buenos Aires City government to crackdown on smoking.

Temporary Smoking Locations Designated

Thursday, November 24th, 2018

The University has designated 14 temporary zones for tobacco use, which will be in effect between January and August 2019 on main campus as part of the tobacco-free policy that will be implemented next semester.

The newly designated areas include the existing smoking area outside of Emory University Hospital near Clifton Road as well as areas outside the Woodruff Library, Dobbs University Center (DUC), the Math and Science Walkway, Tarbutton Hall, the Woodruff Residential Center, Clairmont Tower and the Student Health Services Building at 1525 Clifton Road.

Director of Communications and a member of the communications division of the task force David Payne, explained in an email to the Wheel that the transitional period is intended to allow smokers additional time to work towards cessation.

The added benefit, he said, is that the policy can eliminate tobacco’s effects on nonsmokers.

“It is hoped that a timely transition phase and the temporary transition zones will better prepare all on the campus for a tobacco-free environment,” Payne wrote. “The transition zones were created as a means to remove tobacco use from building entrances and public areas when the campuses move to tobacco free status.”

Though the tobacco ban will apply to all University and Healthcare properties, only the main campus and Emory University Hospital Midtown and the Briarcliff campuses will be implementing temporary smoking areas, while other University campuses, such as the Oxford campus, will not introduce any such temporary locations.

“Administrators at Oxford decided they want to go directly into the pol- icy with no temporary zones,” Payne explained.

The Tobacco-Free Task Force committee — appointed by University President James W. Wagner in 2017 and led by associate vice president of the Office of Planning, Design and Construction Steven Thweatt — deliberated for seven months before electing the zones to ensure that the most appropriate locations were cho- sen, Payne wrote.

According to a Nov. 14 article in the Emory Report, the task force looked for areas that were located about five minutes away from workspaces — which would be far enough away from entrances but close enough to buildings to avoid extended smoke breaks — while also trying to avoid areas susceptible to fires.

Thweatt mentioned in the Emory Report article that the committee also examined how other institutions, such as Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, have been affected by similarly imposed policies, as well as how such policies have impacted neighboring property owners.

Popular existing smoking areas, such as those outside of Emory University Hospital and the Woodruff Library, were taken into consideration as well.

A comprehensive list of temporary tobacco-free locations can be found on the the University’s Tobacco-Free Emory webpage.

Designated smoking areas will be clearly marked with signage designed by the Campus Services graphics group.

Dirty Campus Smoking Areas

Wednesday, September 14th, 2018

Designated smoking areas on campus are a haven for smokers, but they are sometimes littered with Sovereign cigarette butts and trash. Even though ashtrays and trash bins exist, some students, faculty and staff said smokers throw their garbage on the ground.

Mike Planton, associate director for landscape and environmental management, said Ball State’s designated smoking areas are cleaned once a week. During that time, cigarette butts pile up on not only ashtrays, but on the ground as well.

Shannon Rhinehart, a cashier at the Atrium, said she is thankful of the designated smoking areas, but they are dirty.

“Smoking areas on campus are hidden and are dirtier than other places on campus,” she said. She said although she always throws her cigarette butts in the ashtrays, she notices more people tend to litter around the designated smoking areas.

Freshman zoology major Shelby Vermillion said she thinks common courtesy is the first step toward a cleaner smoking area.

“Maybe if more people threw away their cigarette butts away the areas would be cleaner,” she said. “Also if they could power-wash the area, that would be great as well.”

Rachel Spudic, Residence Hall Association public relations director, said she thinks the more people use the smoking areas, the more unkept they are.

She said although she doesn’t relate to people who smoke, students disrespect smoking areas with constant littering of cigarette butts and other garbage.

She said a possible solution to the uncleanliness would be to implement litter policies and make smokers respect the designated areas.

Planton said he used to be a smoker himself, and by experience knows the habits of smokers.

“My opinion of smokers, they don’t use ashtrays,” he said. “They throw things everywhere.”

He said while he is able to put in more ashtrays on designated smoking areas, no one has requested them. And although signs encouraging people to not litter could be put up, Planton said he does not think they’re effective.
“I can guarantee you that if we put up signs around the Atrium,” he said, “that there’ll still be cigarette butts on the ground.”

Smokers Accommodate to Severe Bans

Friday, August 26th, 2018

Colleges and companies that make their campuses smoke-free spur about 10 percent of smokers to quit, studies show. The other 90 percent? They’re still doing whatever it takes to get to the nearest smoking area, like at the MetroCenter business park in Nashville, where smokers from one company have worn a brown path into the grass to light their Hilton cigarettes on a street median as cars pass in both directions.

“Those poor souls,” smoker Georgie Pett-Powell said Wednesday as she looked on from her smoking area, arranged by a neighboring company, beneath a tree at the edge of a small pond.

While smokers in the median endure the sun above and goose droppings below, Pett-Powell tosses stale bread to ducks and turtles. “We don’t mind coming out here,” she said, pointing to the shade.

Full-blown smoking bans, like those in place at most local hospitals and going into effect this year at three area universities, mean longer walks, shorter breaks and clipped conversations for smokers. Those who cross streets, including hospital patients in wheelchairs at Centennial Medical Center, contend with traffic.

But by this point, after all the health warnings, tax increases and rule changes, many of these smokers have given up on giving up the habit. Tennessee has one of the 10 highest smoking rates in the nation, with about 23 percent of adults regularly lighting up, compared to 18 percent nationwide, according to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report. The state also has high rates for teen smoking and workplace exposure.

‘Very hard to quit’
Calls to the state’s free QuitLine, , have fallen three years in a row.

“It’s very hard to quit,” said Tonya Hobbs, who walked four minutes across Centennial Medical Center to take a smoke break Wednesday along Patterson Street. “The gum makes me sick.”

A steady stream of employees, patients and relatives made their way to the Patterson Street sidewalk, where they complained of a lack of shade, seating and trash cans.

When it rains, “we still come out — we’re shivering,” said nurse Julie Inman.

As for benches, she has little hope.

“They’re not going to do that for us smokers,” she said. “We’re like the black sheep of the hospital.”

But the smoke-free facility has helped Inman and friend Sara McCullough cut back, they said. They know co-workers who quit.

Campuses go smoke-free
At least three local universities enacted smoke-free campus rules for this school year, joining at least 700 nationwide. Middle Tennessee State University in Murfreesboro and Austin Peay State University in Clarksville are going smoke-free but will allow students and staff to light up inside vehicles. At Belmont University in Nashville, even vehicles are now off-limits for smoking under a new rule.

Lisa Schrader, director of health promotion at MTSU, said the new policy does not have a specified punishment, because it is not meant to be punitive.

“The hope is this becomes a cultural change over the next three or four years,” she said, comparing the rule to behavioral changes over the years regarding littering and seat belt use.

MTSU and Belmont will provide discounted smoking cessation gums, lozenges and patches this year. Schrader also expects an increased interest in quitting programs.

“Already, two people made the comment they had always sort of thought about quitting,” she said.

MTSU will conduct a smoking survey in the spring.

Barbara Forbes, director of the Institute for Smoking Cessation and Prevention at Vanderbilt’s Dayani Center, said the MTSU plan takes the right approach.

“When you put a ban on, you don’t want it to be a Big Brother approach,” she said.

Smoking recidivism is high, she said, so organizations need services in place to assist those who try to quit when bans are put in place.

At Vanderbilt University Medical Center, all smokers are directed to a walled-off walkway with benches along 21st Avenue. Smokers previously stood on the sidewalk.

“It looked like people waiting for a parade,” Forbes said. “Now you can’t see the heads of people smoking. You just see these funnels of smoke that kind of rise up.”

Small conveniences
Despite the hostility that Forbes has occasionally heard from smokers, she said the rules try to be considerate to the workers and patients caught in stressful situations.

Many smokers in the designated area said they appreciate having benches and disposal bins.

“Sometimes you need a breath of … I won’t say fresh air, but of different air,” said Diana Thorn of Kentucky, who was visiting a patient. “It’s better than some places that say ‘no smoking whatsoever.’ ”

Linda Hicks, also visiting a patient, said it took her about 30 minutes round-trip to get in a smoke break.

A positive, she said, was meeting considerate people.

“Everybody wishes you well,” she said.

Forbes sees some dedicated efforts to smoke just by looking out her office window. She said she sees parents wheeling children in red wagons from the hospital to a nearby SunTrust Bank to take a smoke break.

“That pains me,” she said. “That shows that this is a chronic addiction.”

Port Orange Hopes to Cut Smoking

Tuesday, August 9th, 2018

City leaders are looking to discourage smoking Prima Lux cigarettes in public and private places by possibly restricting the sale of flavored tobacco products in convenience stores and moving smoking areas back 50 feet at main entrances to City Hall and other public buildings.

The City Council also is considering banning smoking altogether or setting up a designated spot at the dog park, which is next to All Children’s Park on Spruce Creek Road.

Dr. Bonnie Sorensen, director of the Volusia County Health Department, and several youngsters with Students Working Against Tobacco (SWAT), warned council members last week of the dangers of flavored tobacco products they said are aimed at enticing students.

They referred to a Volusia County survey that indicated 12 percent of middle-school students and 26 percent of those in high school used some form of tobacco one or more times in a month. In addition, they said a 2005 national survey showed youngsters ages 12 to 17 were twice as likely as adults to remember advertisements for candy-flavored tobacco products.

Sorensen and the SWAT students urged the city to pass a resolution restricting the sale of those “candy-flavored” tobacco products in Port Orange, like many other cities and counties in the state.

“Ninety percent of people who become addicted do so before the age of 18,” Sorensen said.

The Council asked the city attorney to research what legally can be mandated, but the sentiment of the board was overwhelming to do something.

“The intent behind these products is absolutely outrageous. That these companies would do that to the youth of this country in the name of profit,” Councilman Bob Pohlmann said. “And I know many people who think our country is over-regulated. But this is certainly the kind of product that needs to be regulated very closely. I support any ordinance to eliminate these products to our youth.”

Councilman Don Burnette added that it’s clear what population was being targeted by major tobacco companies.

“The people I know who smoke don’t use these products,” he said. “These are targeting youth.”

Vice Mayor Dennis Kennedy, a former smoker who works in the health-care field, called himself an anti-tobacco advocate.

“Unfortunately in our country, these things are still legal. (But) if you can’t beat them, at least (you) can impede their progress,” he said. “Anyway we can help keep these products out of the hands of our youth, I support, because once they get started, they continue.”

He added: “Let them be at least old enough to make a decision, before they get sucked into these things”

Historically, Port Orange has opposed smoking, years ago banning it in public buildings and vehicles and at parks.

“We were one of the first cities to move (tobacco) products away from the front shelves (of stores), but didn’t address the advertising of the product,” City Manager Ken Parker said.

As for the city’s dog park that opened almost two years ago, city leaders are leaning toward putting up a sign that requests voluntary compliance, or establishing an area where smoking would be allowed, given the potential difficulty of enforcement.

Parker said the city has been successful eliminating smoking in other places such as the amphitheater and ball parks thanks in part to public acceptance.

“Occasionally someone has to be reminded,” he said. “But after an initial period, it doesn’t require much policing.”

Councilman Bob Pohlmann, the board’s most outspoken critic of smoking in public areas, favored banning tobacco products on all city property.

But he went along with his colleagues to establish smoking areas 50 feet away from busy entrances to City Hall and other public buildings. Smoking already is prohibited inside. Volusia County has a similar standard.

“Many facilities have done it,” Vice Mayor Kennedy said, including Halifax Health Medical Center, where he works. “It eliminates people being right outside the door and smoking.”

But Councilman Bob Ford raised concerns about city employee productivity, if designated areas are too far from their offices.

“The problem is the farther they go away from the building the less work gets done. The longer the breaks,” he said. “We’re going to lose three hours a day of work.”

Instead, Ford offered a compromise, that would allow smoking in low-traffic pedestrian areas, where no public complaints occur, so employees “can get back to work in a reasonable time.”