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  • 13.12.2011 Special Christmas Cigarettes Sales

    Dear Valuable Customers! Our Company is sending the warmest congratulations to you and your families! New Year is always a "new page" in your life. Wishing You Health, Wisdom, New Achievements and Happiness! We appreciate your cooperation and would like to wish you a wonderful Holiday Season! Everyone likes sales and discounts! We are glad to remind you about our special CHRISTMAS Offer! Don’t lose the opportunity to buy a set of 8 cartons of the following cigarettes brands at the discount price in our online cigarettes shop like: Atis Cigarettes Beratt Cigarettes ...

  • 02.12.2011 More Teens Are Smoking

    Maine is one of the top states in terms of spending on buy cigarettes prevention and cessation programs, a new report finds, yet more kids are picking up the habit.Maine is spending $9.4 million in fiscal year 2012 on its anti-cigarettes programs, according to a report released Tuesday by a coalition of public health groups. That’s barely half the $18.5 million recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and $500,000 shy of what the state spent in the last fiscal year. Still, Maine ranks sixth in the country in anti-cigarettes spending.“For the last 10 years,...

  • 01.12.2011 Report On State Anti-smoking Campaigns

    A new report shows state programs designed to reduce cheap cigarettes use have been cut by 12% in the past year. The report by the Coalition of Public Health Organizations, says 36% of the funding has been cut in the last four years. Peggy Huppert of the American Cancer Society says that’s disappointing in the wake of Iowa’s 65% funding cut.“We knew what the situation was here in Iowa, now we see that we are part of a very troubling national trend,” Huppert says. All states have faced budget troubles, but Huppert says Iowa’s cut is linked more to politics. Huppert says,”No other...

  • 06.11.2011 Job Applicants For Nicotine

    The change in hiring begins at Providence on the day of the Great American Smokeout, the annual event of the American Cancer Society that encourages smokers to quit.Smokers, if you want a job at Alaska's biggest private employer, forget about it. Providence Alaska Medical Center and its affiliates around the state will stop hiring cheap cigarettes users as of Nov. 17.That's when Providence will begin testing prospective employees for nicotine along with illegal drugs."We believe that by doing this move, to where we are no longer going to hire cigarettes users, that we are...

  • 24.10.2011 Philadelphia-area Hospitals Acting To Curb Smoking

    When Albert Einstein Healthcare Network's Elkins Park campus goes cigarettes-free Thursday, it will join the majority of hospitals around the region, including all in South Jersey, that in the last few years have banned buy cigarettes from their entire campuses, including parking lots and sidewalks.Even some of those that allow some smoking cigarettes somewhere - though rarely inside - are taking leadership roles on an issue that is often described as a moral imperative for institutions whose mission is health. Abington Memorial Hospital and its various campuses stopped hiring smokers...

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Bill Would Snuff Out Nevada's Smoking Ban In Bars

Lawmakers have introduced a surprise bill to lift the ban on smoking cigarettes in bars that serve food, a move that might have generated more buzz Friday night if many taverns weren't already breaking the law.

Inside the Tap House in Las Vegas, which cheerfully declares itself "smoker friendly!" on its façade, smokers and nonsmokers already sit side-by-side near patrons eating dinner.

"If I wanted clean air and kids around I'd go to a bookstore," said Kenny Stevens, 36, who doesn't smoke cigarettes but still was pleased by the news.

Such statements were the norm in 2006, when voters approved the Clean Indoor Air Act, the measure that banned smoking cigarettes in many businesses, including bars, taverns and saloons that serve food. Friday's measure would repeal the restrictions on bars, but not on restaurants, slot-machine areas of grocery stores, schools and day-care centers.

Despite smokers' nonchalance, the lawmakers' action drew immediate condemnation from health advocates and applause from the tavern industry.

One Clark County commissioner said the casino industry was pressing lawmakers for the change to repay tavern owners for supporting restrictions on Dotty's and other small-gaming establishments.

The Ways and Means Committee introduced Assembly Bill 571 so lawmakers can debate whether to repeal the ban for places that serve people who are 21 or older, said Assemblywoman Debbie Smith, D-Sparks, the panel's chairwoman.

She said bar owners, especially in Southern Nevada, have complained that the smoking cigarettes ban has hurt business at a time when the economy is slumping.

"The tavern owners say they have suffered very serious business losses and people have lost their jobs because of the ban," Smith said in an interview Friday.

Smith said she was reserving judgment on the bill, which will get a committee hearing Monday.

The ban is more contentious in Southern Nevada where taverns are competing with businesses such as Dotty's that have no kitchens and cater to smokers who play slots. In Washoe County, there are fewer problems with the ban, Smith said.

The late introduction of the bill in the final two weeks of the session suggests some Democratic leaders back it.

It would probably get bipartisan support if it's cast as a jobs-saver, and if big gaming gets behind the effort -- increasing the chance of it passing.

Assemblyman Mark Sherwood, R-Henderson, decried the original ban and blamed "anti-smoking cigarettes Nazis" for helping push voters to approve it in the first place.

"It's been horrible for business," Sherwood said when asked about the smoking cigarettes restrictions, which he said were too harsh. "There are ways to do this without being draconian."

But the American Lung Association in Nevada lambasted the effort to restore smoking cigarettes in pubs that sell food.

The group noted that 310,000 people voted to forbid smoking cigarettes near food. And in the same election, voters defeated a competing measure the industry proposed that would have weakened existing state laws on smoking cigarettes in public places.

"There's no safe level of secondhand smoke," said Allison Newlon Moser, the lung association's executive director.

It not only goes against the will of the public, Moser said, but it imperils the health of employees who must work in smoky settings. Working eight hours in a place with heavy secondhand smoke cigarettes can be tantamount to puffing a pack of cigarettes, she said.

Nevadans already have a higher rate of emphysema than the national average, largely because of cigarettes and air pollution, Moser said.

"The tavern owners talk about the jobs that are lost," she said. If the bill passes, "it would only increase jobs for health care workers."

Some bars and taverns complied with the ban, erecting walls between their restaurant and bar areas. But many business appeared to do little or nothing to comply with the effort. At the Tap House Friday evening, patrons smoked and drank at the bar, while others ate dinner just a few feet away.

Ken Kotora and his wife, Jaennette , have been visiting the bar since they moved to Las Vegas in 1996. They're nonsmokers, and they were eating just a few feet away from smokers.

Ken Kotora, 65, voted in favor of the ban -- but on accident. He said the language of the petition was misleading. He favors legislators repealing the ban.

"Don't stop a bar from smoking cigarettes," he said. "Smokers have rights too."

The couple said they noticed fewer customers at the Tap House just after the ban took effect, but business has returned to normal since.

One pub owner cheered when he heard of the legislative effort to overturn the ban.

Those who pursued the ban claimed that it would increase foot traffic in bars because more people would be attracted to smoke-free venues, but the opposite proved true, said Joe Wilcock, owner of the Brewery Bar and Grill and past president of the Nevada Tavern Association.

"That's a fallacy -- it never happened," said Wilcock, who estimates his sales dropped by 25 percent.

No one can deny that smoking cigarettes is unhealthy, Wilcock said. But people who don't want to breathe secondhand smoke cigarettes should not work or hang out in places where smoking cigarettes is allowed, he said.

Wilcock noted that casinos are exempt from the smoking cigarettes ban, calling it "hypocritical."

County Commissioner Tom Collins, a former assemblyman, said he heard that big casinos cut a deal with the tavern owners; if the taverns backed restrictions on Dotty's, the casinos would support lifting the smoking cigarettes ban.

"That's politics," Collins said.

Gaming operators complained that it was unfair that they pay a percentage of their gambling revenue, while small establishments pay a flat fee, Collins said.

In April, commissioners approved new rules for Dotty's and similar venues that include a requirement to embed eight gaming machines in bars instead of propping the machines atop bars. These businesses must comply within two years.

Also, any new place operating as a tavern must have 2,500 square feet of public space, a kitchen open at least 12 hours a day and be 2,000 feet away from another tavern.

Virginia Valentine, president of the Nevada Resort Association, declined to comment about the bill, saying she had just learned about it.

Jennifer Sizemore, Southern Nevada Health District spokeswoman, said the bill is no surprise.

Health officials began hearing rumblings during the Dotty's uproar that the tavern industry would try to reverse the smoking cigarettes ban, she said. Although the bill would forbid smoking cigarettes if minors are on the premises, there are concerns about patrons and workers inhaling cigarette fumes, she said.

"As a public health agency, our goal is to protect as many people as possible from the dangers of secondhand smoke," Sizemore said.

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