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<article>
  <title>A National Ban on Smoking in Public Places</title>

  <articleinfo>
    <author>
      <firstname>Simon</firstname>
      <surname>South</surname>

      <email>ssouth@slowcomputing.org</email>
    </author>

    <pubdate>2002-11-11</pubdate>

    <copyright>
      <year>2002</year>
      <year>2003</year>
      <holder>Simon South</holder>
    </copyright>

    <legalnotice>
      Verbatim copying and distribution of this material is permitted in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
    </legalnotice>

    <abstract>
      Argues that the public smoking bans in effect in various Canadian municipalities should be extended to a nation-wide ban.  Written as part of an introductory course in English composition.
    </abstract>
  </articleinfo>

  <para>Over the last decade, a number of Canadian municipalities have
passed bylaws prohibiting the smoking of tobacco products in enclosed,
public spaces, particularly restaurants and bars. These laws have
created a great deal of controversy, but by protecting the public
against second-hand smoke (the smoke from the tip of a cigar or
cigarette, plus that exhaled by the smoker), they represent an
important step forward in public health&mdash;and they need to be taken
further. Canada should bring the fight against second-hand smoke to a
national level.</para>

  <para>The dangers of second-hand smoke are well established.
According to the Canadian Lung Association, cigarette smoke is just as
dangerous to bystanders as it is to the smoker. In fact, second-hand
smoke contains even higher levels of known cancer-causing substances
than directly-inhaled smoke, plus twice the amount of tar and
nicotine. Second-hand smoke is so dangerous it's believed to be
responsible for as many as 300 lung cancer deaths in Canada every year
<citation><citetitle pubwork='article'>Second-hand
smoke</citetitle></citation>.</para>

  <para>People who work in bars, restaurants and hotels and the worst
affected, as they have no escape from customers who choose to smoke.
It's believed that in a single work day, these employees can breathe
in a quantity of smoke equivalent to that from two packages of
cigarettes <citation><citetitle pubwork='article'>The
Facts</citetitle>, 2002</citation>. As a result, food service workers
in this country are, as a group, fifty percent more likely than the
general population to develop lung cancer. For waitresses, the
difference is a shocking four hundred percent <citation><citetitle
pubwork='article'>Smoking bans</citetitle>, 1999</citation>.</para>

  <para>Faced with this evidence, it's vital that the federal
government recognize second-hand smoke as a serious public health
issue and pass legislation to protect its citizens, especially those
who work in the hospitality industry. Canada's municipal anti-smoking
bylaws should be expanded to a nation-wide ban on smoking in public
spaces.</para>

  <para>There's already reason to believe such a ban will be
effective. Only a year after similar anti-smoking legislation passed
in the state of California, a study into bartenders' health found that
sixty percent of those previously suffering from lung ailments no
longer reported any symptoms. In addition, the lung capacity of
bartenders had increased by an average of four percent
<citation><author><surname>Parang</surname></author>,
2002</citation>.</para>

  <para>Still, some argue that a total ban on smoking is too
aggressive. The Canadian Restaurant and Foodservices Association
(<acronym>CRFA</acronym>) continues to promote improved ventilation
systems as an equally viable way to address the health issue
<citation><citetitle pubwork='article'>Restaurants
caught</citetitle></citation>. It bases this opinion on a 2001 study
conducted by the Ontario Restaurant Hotel and Motel Association
(<acronym>ORHMA</acronym>), which showed the level of tobacco smoke in
the air over the non-smoking section of a Toronto bar was <quote>not
statistically different</quote> from that of a completely non-smoking
establishment <citation><citetitle pubwork='article'>Smoking
regulations</citetitle>, 2001</citation>.</para>

  <para>The legitimacy of this study is brought into question,
however, by documents linking it to money received from Canadian
tobacco companies
<citation><author><surname>Perley</surname></author>,
2002</citation>.</para>

  <para>Other research disagrees with the study's conclusions. An
independent study into the efficacy of ventilators concluded that any
system capable of safely reducing the concentration of tobacco smoke
would necessarily produce <quote>tornado-like levels of air
flow</quote> indoors
<citation><author><surname>Repace</surname></author>, 1999</citation>.
A consultant hired to advise British Columbia's Capitol Region
District also hypothesized that an effective system, if built, would
cost $450 000 per year in energy alone <citation><citetitle
pubwork='article'>Smoking bans</citetitle></citation>. Increased
ventilation is not a practical solution.</para>

  <para>Some bar and restaurant owners have protested that banning
tobacco smoke will hurt their business by discouraging customers from
eating out <citation><author><surname>Monteiro</surname></author>,
2000</citation>. This doesn't seem to match what the customers are
thinking, however: according to one poll, 95 percent of Canadians
recognize second-hand smoke as a health hazard, with 88 percent
feeling that employers should provide a smoke-free environment for
their workers <citation><citetitle pubwork='article'>The
Facts</citetitle>, 2002</citation>. Given these statistics, it seems
more reasonable to expect the elimination of second-hand smoke to
improve business.</para>

  <para>In fact, that's exactly what happened in California following
the introduction of its ban in 1998. Taxable sales in restaurants
serving beer and wine grew that year by 6.1 percent. Sales in
establishments serving a wider variety of liquor were up also, by 5.1
percent <citation><corpauthor>California State Board of
Equalization</corpauthor></citation>. Similarly, the 1995 introduction
of smoking restrictions in New York City led to a 2.1 percent increase
in sales for eating and drinking establishments, and a remarkable 37
percent increase for hotels
<citation><author><surname>Repace</surname></author>, 1999</citation>.
Consumers enjoy smoke-free environments, and are willing to pay for
them.</para>

  <para>Smoking bans are safe for the economy, more practical than
technological solutions, and, most importantly, effective in
protecting the public's health. The federal government should move
quickly to introduce a nation-wide ban on public smoking for the
wellbeing of all Canadians.</para>

  <bibliography>
    <title>References</title>

    <bibliomixed><corpauthor>California State Board of
Equalization</corpauthor> (n.d.). <citetitle
pubwork='article'>Statewide taxable sales, by type of business,
1998</citetitle>. Retrieved <date>5 November 2002</date> from
<bibliosource class='uri'><ulink
url='http://www.boe.ca.gov/news/t1a98f.htm'/></bibliosource></bibliomixed>

    <bibliomixed><citetitle pubwork='article'>The Facts: Second-Hand
Smoke in the Workplace</citetitle> (<pubdate>2002</pubdate>).
Retrieved <date>5 November 2002</date> from <bibliosource
class='uri'><ulink
url='http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/english/media/releases/2002/2002_64bk2.htm'/></bibliosource></bibliomixed>

    <bibliomixed><bibliomset
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<citetitle pubwork='article'>Smoking ban gets mixed
reviews</citetitle> [Electronic version].</bibliomset> <bibliomset
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    <bibliomixed><bibliomset
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<bibliosource class='uri'><ulink
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    <bibliomixed><author><surname>Perley</surname>, <othername
role='fi'>M</othername></author>. (<pubdate>2002</pubdate>).
<citetitle pubwork='article'>Evidence of links between tobacco,
hospitality industries to block smoke-free policies in Ontario now
clear: Health Agencies</citetitle>. Retrieved <date>9 November
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    <bibliomixed><author><surname>Repace</surname>, <othername
role='fi'>J</othername>., et al</author>. (<pubdate>1999</pubdate>).
<citetitle pubwork='article'>Fact sheet on second-hand
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<bibliosource class='uri'><ulink
url='http://www.repace.com/fact_intro.html'/></bibliosource></bibliomixed>

    <bibliomixed><citetitle pubwork='article'>Restaurants caught in
smoking crossfire</citetitle> (n.d.). Retrieved <date>9 November
2002</date> from <bibliosource class='uri'><ulink
url='http://www.crfa.ca/issues/issues_smokingregulations_crossfire.htm'/></bibliosource></bibliomixed>

    <bibliomixed><citetitle class='article'>Second-hand
smoke</citetitle> (<pubdate>2002</pubdate>). Retrieved <date>3
November 2002</date> from <bibliosource class='uri'><ulink
url='http://www.on.lung.ca/nosmoking/secondhand.html'/></bibliosource></bibliomixed>

    <bibliomixed><bibliomset relation='article'><citetitle
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[Electronic version].</bibliomset> <bibliomset
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1999</pubdate>.</bibliomset>  Retrieved from <bibliosource
class='uri'><ulink
url='http://www.lung.ca/ca/articles/smokingbans.html'/></bibliosource></bibliomixed>

    <bibliomixed><citetitle pubwork='article'>Smoking regulations -
Black Dog paper summary</citetitle> (<pubdate>2001</pubdate>).
Retrieved <date>9 November 2002</date> from <bibliosource
class='uri'><ulink
url='http://www.crfa.ca/issues/issues_smokingregulations_blackdog.htm'/></bibliosource></bibliomixed>

    <bibliomixed><citetitle pubwork='article'>What is second-hand
smoke?</citetitle> (n.d.) Retrieved <date>4 November 2002</date> from
<bibliosource class='uri'><ulink
url='http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hecs-sesc/tobacco/facts/health_facts/second_hand.html'/></bibliosource></bibliomixed>
  </bibliography>
</article>
