Is Expanding the Dallas Smoking Ordinance a Commie Plot?

City Council debate over expanding the smoking ban gets heated

It might seem that the battle lines between those supporting the expansion of the Dallas smoking ban to bars, taverns and pool halls would be clearly drawn: nonsmokers versus smokers and those who own bars, taverns and pool halls. But things at City Hall are seldom that easy. Instead, Dallas City Council members are voicing the concerns of public health advocates on the one hand, and property rights advocates and the bad-for-business bunch on the other.

Although the council is scheduled to vote on the ban on December 10, members have been quite public about their feelings in the run-up to the vote.

Mayor Tom Leppert actually took a stance on the issue during his campaign in 2007, endorsing the notion that the city's current smoking ordinance, which had been in place since 2003 and banned smoking in restaurants, bingo halls and most public buildings, needed to be expanded. In a June 17 Dallas Morning News article, Leppert suggested that the council was ready to move forward on a more extensive citywide smoking ban. A formal ordinance proposal would be drafted and presented to the council's quality of life and government services committee by August, council member Pauline Medrano told the News.

Advocacy groups lobbied council members for months, but it wasn't until a November 5 meeting that the council created a City Smoking Ordinance Special Ad-Hoc Committee to sift through the thorny legal issues presented by the ban and to draft a final ordinance for full council consideration. There seemed little support for banning smoking in tobacco shops and little controversy about banning smoking within 15 feet of the entrance to a public building. Although the committee took a straw poll and four out of five of its members present supported a bar, tavern and pool hall ban, it became clear in the aftermath of the vote that some council members were less ready to move forward than the mayor had previously indicated.

"My whole thing is rights, property rights," council member Sheffie Kadane says. "I am not for breaking the law, but there is no law against smoking."

At the November 17 committee meeting, Kadane, who is not on the committee, expressed his position by offering an example of a hypothetical business owner who, under the ordinance, couldn't have a separate smoking room on the 50th floor of his own building. "That's communistic," he said, to much applause and cheering.

Council member Angela Hunt, clearly aligning herself with public health advocates, said she doesn't care if smokers want to kill themselves. But "what they don't have the right to do is push that smoke down my lungs." Her words were also greeted with applause.

Hunt was familiar with the 2006 U.S. Surgeon General's report titled The Health Consequences of Involuntary Exposure to Tobacco Smoke, which concludes that "exposure of adults to secondhand smoke has immediate adverse effects on the cardiovascular system and causes coronary heart disease and lung cancer." The report seems adamant that the only way to fully protect nonsmokers from exposure to secondhand smoke is by "eliminating smoking in indoor spaces."

But James Graham, who attended the meeting and appeared to have no business stake in the issue, disagreed with the Surgeon General's report and countered that the risk of harm from exposure "is just about like getting hit by lightning." Graham, president of Palo Petroleum, says he is fighting the expansion of the smoking ban because he "hates seeing lies being told and laws being passed and more and more infringements on this country."

Council member Mitchell Rasansky takes a similar position. "I'm also concerned about the scare tactics. We're talking about secondhand smoke in a place that you'll be in for an hour and a half or two hours—in a bar or a billiard hall or something like that. People do not have to go into those places."

Rasansky and Kadane have an ally in council member Jerry Allen who remains concerned over the expense of enforcing an expanded ordinance. Last year, he says, only 13 citations were given to violators of the current smoking ordinance and the cost of an expanded ordinance could be more than a million dollars, at least for the first year. "That's a lot of money to spend on 13 citations." Allen explains that in 2007, the city's 311 system received more than 400,000 calls, and only 42 were complaints about smoking. Yet there were 502 complaints about roosters. "That would lead me to believe that our current ordinance is OK," Allen says.

There seemed no consensus at the meeting as to whether widening the smoking ban would affect business. Karen Hoyt-Potasznik, chair for Smoke Free Dallas, part of a coalition of mostly public health organizations seeking to ban secondhand smoke from indoor workplaces, told the committee that her organization had researched sales tax revenue from businesses in cities that have already implemented a smoking ban. The tax revenue, she maintained, has remained steady before and after various bans.

But Clinton Coleman, a member of the board of directors for Fox and Hound Restaurant Group, maintains that their business has seen an average 14 percent decline in sales in cities that have passed a ban. He urged the council to allow a separate room for smoking patrons.

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  • Dan Hickman 12/09/2008 1:13:00 AM

    I guess I'll just take my business to the sub-burbs! You already have two-thirds of the city! Communistic!

  • T 12/05/2008 1:36:00 AM

    If cigarette smokers were drug addicts, wouldn't it be illegal. How would you like for someone to tell you that you couldn't eat a chimichanga because it was deep fryed, and therefore deemed unhealthy for you? Oh wait, they are trying to do that. People have choices. If you don't like to be around cigarettes, then do not frequent an establishment that allows smoking. This country was founded on freedom of choice. Not much freedom, when you don't have much to choose from.

  • northstar102351 11/30/2008 8:47:00 PM

    Cigarette smokers are DRUG ADDICTS ! They should be treated accordingly !

  • Greg 11/29/2008 12:42:00 AM

    Well I recently became a distributor for Crown7, they have a product that has revolutionized the industry of smoking. I own a bar and not only has it saved my business but it has made my business go way up. www.Crown7.com

  • Anonymous 11/28/2008 3:29:00 PM

    I don't understand the bar owner who wants the smoking ban but won't ban it in hi sown bar. Does he need the governments permission to do everything? Just hang up some no smoking signs and ban it, and advertise it. Why cede control of your bar to some city bureaucrat?

  • Ken Hill 11/28/2008 5:56:00 AM

    This letter, from a non-smoker, refers to all anti-smoking bans. *An open letter that was emailed to all (103) Ontario, Canada political MPP's in early May, 2008. No replies! Betrayal, Anti-Smoking Message is Like Fascism that Preys Upon Our Children We must not look within ourselves. We may discover what we are becoming! Moral judgement is the mirror, mirror, on the wall image, always lurking in our mind, like an alter-conscience, prepared to reveal the frightening truth, in our soul, such as the undeserved vengefulness, at any cost, wielded against smokers. Even betrayal, of the next generation, becomes palatable within self-betrayal. This remorseless mental/emotional preying upon, our precious children, recklessly poisons their mind and spirit, under the government's pernicious slogan "health and safety." By supporting anti-smoking, we endorse and promote Fascism, an historically proven scurvy upon humanity! The inevitable shame, of our past actions, can still be averted, by rescinding this government agenda! The most"dangerous smoke" comes not from cigarettes, instead from the government smoke screen to obscure from view, that the real issue is Capitalism and science versus Fascism and politicized environmentalism, not 'health and safety.' Science and politicized environmentalism are colliding worlds, science being the height of pursuing truth, politicized environmentalism the depth of distorting truth. Anti-smoking is part of politicized environmentalism and the attempted foundation of Fascism! Do we therefore side with Capitalism, science, Second World War troops and our allies-- honour; or do we side with Fascism, politicized environmentalism, our enemies of the Second World War-- disgrace? Thus far we blindly follow our enemies and disgrace! From the mouth of Paul Watson, co-founder of Greenpeace, "It doesn't matter what is true; it only matters what people believe is true.....You are what the media define you to be. Greenpeace became a myth and a myth-generating machine." We deserve truth, not half-truths and propaganda! For any high ranking government official that lack this critical knowledge, they are in their office under false pretenses. They are unprepared to govern. Their present course of anti-smoking legislations is the proof of that statement. In the words of Psychotherapist Nathaniel Branden, "I was acutely conscious of the pressure to 'adapt' and to absorb the values of the 'tribe'---family, community and culture. It seemed to me that what was asked was the surrender of my judgement and also my conviction that my life and what I made of it was of the highest possible value. I saw my contemporaries surrendering and losing their fire. Why was growing up equated with giving up?" Philosopher/Novelist Ayn Rand wrote, "If some demagogue were to offer us, as a guiding creed, the following tenets: that statistics should be substituted for truth, vote-counting for principles, numbers for rights, and public polls for morality--that pragmatic, range-of-the-moment expediency should be the criterion of a country's interests, and that the number of its adherents should be the criterion of an idea's truth or falsehood--that any desire of any nature whatsoever should be accepted as a valid claim, provided it is held by a sufficient number of people--that a majority may do anything it pleases to a minority--in short, gang rule and mob rule--if a demagogue were to offer it, he would not get very far. Yet all of it is contained in--and camouflaged by--the notion of 'Government by Consensus." 'Rule by Consensus,' (Rule by health care pressure group) is todays' anti-ideology in government. Appeasement of these power-lusting, health care pressure groups is of higher priority than our children and all other tax payers, voters, and citizens. The permeating emotion from 'Rule by Consensus' is demoralizing, debilitating fear instead of an optimistic view of the future. Note this recent example, Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty said he wouldn't entertain a ban (smoking in cars with children) because it amounts to "too much intrusion into people's private lives." The logical interpretation of this statement is that the entire anti-smoking movement eliminates smoker's individual rights, and has always been an intrusion into a smoker's family dynamic. Now, the Ontario government is prepared, in predictable flip-flop fashion, to enact such a ban. In ignobility, many people have misaligned themself with politicized environmentalism, despite the fact that 1930's, 1940's, Germany used "politicized ecology and public health" to base its rationalizations. Are we predisposed to mistakenly mirror the historic footsteps of self-loathing mass destruction? No! Everyone has an individual mind and conscience, above party politics. Be true to them, follow your courage (truth) and dethrone your fear (fallacy). Rescind this government's shameful anti-smoking agenda. References: Paul Watson - Environmental Overkill, (Whatever happened to common sense) - book Psychotherapist Nathaniel Branden, The Six Pillars of Self-Esteem - book Ayn Rand - Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal - book

  • Ken Hill 11/28/2008 5:41:00 AM

    Government Will Make Smokers, Children, Families, Sick Government's that foster anti-smoking policies lead the real health epidemic, government interference. They are not using science as their competent guide into the future. Instead they use the deep festering envy of politicized environmentalists (those unable to compete on a level playing field) to revisit remnants of the dark ages. The profound statement of philosopher/novelist Ayn Rand echoes the truth that smothers us, "Today, we live in the age of envy." I am a life-long non-smoker, who has lost the four most precious people in my life. Cancer was the effect, a consequence, but not the cause. Yet, I will not help to propagandize health into dictatorial policy through anti-smoking. I do not wish to repeat the 1930's, 1940's. Do you? Exactly how can our government "create a healthier society for all" when they betray the smoker's sense of trust, demoralize their self-confidence, disrupt their employer-employee relationships, upheave their family life, and undermind their efficacy by alienating them from their own human nature? This destructive mind/body dichotomy will subject smoker's to long-term emotional and mental disorders, thus leading to serious physical ailments. In reality, our government is making them sick. A particularily foreboding feature of the mind/body dichotomy is the government's suffocating negative influence while aggressively restricting young people from making their own decisions. Government aggression will severely jeopardize each young person's struggle to form a necessary sense of self-confidence. This fragile process is usually a traumatic experience, especially when that negative influence is hidden under the misconception of government benevolence. In reality, our government lacks the knowledge of the trigger mechanism that sets off most cancers or most other major diseases to then become a critical danger for human beings. It is not smoking, nor second-hand smoke. Then why does government pathetically use smoker's as their scapegoat, perhaps they require an example in order to intimidate other industries? Chicken Littleism is no longer a silly joke. It is now a snarling threat. Stamp out politicized environmentalism, not smokers.

 

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