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No-smoking bill heads to House floor

Wednesday, March 25, 2009
(Updated 3:00 am)

RALEIGH —A proposal to ban smoking in most public places is headed to the state House floor where a kindred measure died two years ago.

The ban would cover virtually all public workplaces, including bars and restaurants.

“It’s close,” Rep. Hugh Holliman said of the count measuring support among the chamber’s 120 members. “We’ve got some people working on it.”

Holliman, the bill’s chief sponsor, said the floor vote would likely come early next week. In 2007, a similar bill failed on a 55-61 vote, which is an uncommonly close margin for all but the most controversial of legislation.

This year’s version of the bill cleared the House Judiciary I Committee Tuesday morning on a voice vote.

Members of that committee considered a pair of amendments that would have granted exceptions to certain businesses. Both were withdrawn, but one that would create loopholes for fraternal and veterans groups such as the VFW may be offered on the House floor.

“This amendment would certainly boost the membership of my VFW chapter,” joked Rep. Grier Martin, a Wake County Democrat.

Questions about the amendment centered on how to define a fraternal organization.

The bill’s proponents say that it is a public health measure based on
studies that show second-hand smoke exposure can be deadly even in small amounts.

Opponents say the measure tramples on property rights, forcing landlords to prohibit smoking rather than letting them make a business decision.

“I had bacon and eggs for breakfast this morning. There’s no risk-free exposure to bacon and eggs,” said Rep. Paul Stam, a Wake County Republican. “It’s just not as great as smoking.”

Support for the measure does not split along party lines. There are Democrats, including Greensboro’s Rep. Earl Jones, who have said they don’t like the bill and there are Republicans who have signed on as co-sponsors.

Holliman said that he doesn’t buy the arguments against the measure, saying that no one forces you to eat a fatty breakfast.

“It just says don’t smoke in public places and don’t force it on the people around you,” Holliman said.

Contact Mark Binker at (919) 832-5549 or mark.binker@news-record.com

Accompanying Photos

File photo (News & Record)

Comments

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Deepbreath

March 25, 2009 - 6:18 am EDT

Nice job Mr. Holliman. I don't mind people smoking around me as long as they don't exhale. It's time for all voters to step up to the plate and start saving lives.

Tony Wilkins

March 25, 2009 - 1:33 pm EDT

copy of e-mail to Paul Stam:
"“I had bacon and eggs for breakfast this morning. There’s no risk-free exposure to bacon and eggs,” said Rep. Paul Stam, a Wake County Republican. “It’s just not as great as smoking.”"

Mr. Stam,
Did you force the other folks in the restaurant to eat your bacon and eggs?
Please, stop embarrassing yourself with this type of comparison.
Whether you consider this a health issue or not, a recent Elon poll indicated that 86% of North Carolinians wanted smoking restrictions.
Do you consider your comments to represent your constituents?

Tony Wilkins
Greensboro, NC

HowieZowie

March 25, 2009 - 6:51 pm EDT

1) The science behind the effects of second hand smoke is sketchy at best, and downright false at worse. The Surgeon General said no amount of second hand smoke is safe. Well duh! No amount of smoke from a campfire is completely safe, either. You only have health issues from second hand smoke if you live with a heavy smoker and you breath it in 24 hours a day. Really, just look around you. How many people you know have gotten sick from second hand smoke? Zero, probably.

2) Tony: 86 percent said they would prefer a ban on smoking? Well if that was the case then why don't they create their own bars and restaurants and only patronize nonsmoking places? You could also probably find 86 percent who prefer not using chop sticks, but we don't legislate them.

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