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          <title>Special Christmas Cigarettes Sales</title>
          <pubDate>2011-12-13 16:51:00</pubDate> 
          <description>



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          <title>More Teens Are Smoking</title>
          <pubDate>2011-12-02 15:57:00</pubDate> 
          <description>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. Thats 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, Maine has been a leader in supporting cigarettes prevention and control activities, said Ed Miller, vice president of health promotion and public policy for the American Lung Association of New England. But the rest of the nation is just doing so badly now that we look good by comparison.Only Alaska and North Dakota fund the programs at the level recommended by the CDC to maximize the return on each dollar.The report found that most states are underfunding cheap cigarettes prevention and cessation programs. Cuts have reduced the funding to its lowest levels since 1999, when states first began receiving money from the previous years landmark cheap cigarette online settlement agreement.Maine will collect $197 million this year from the settlement and cigarettes online taxes, but will spend just 4.8 percent of those dollars on buy cigarette online prevention programs, according to a press release from the coalition, which includes the Campaign for cigarettes-Free Kids, the American Heart and Lung associations and the American Cancer Society.Even in these difficult budget times, cigarettes for sale prevention is a smart investment for Maine that will protect kids, save lives and save money by reducing cigarettes-related health care costs, Matthew Myers, president of the Campaign for cigarettes-Free Kids, said in the release.cigarettes settlement proceeds are directed to the Fund for a Healthy Maine, while discount cigarettes tax revenues are funneled to the states general fund. Maine has done better than most states in protecting its money from the settlement, said Becky Smith, chief policy officer for the Maine Public Health Association. However, more than $100 million has been diverted over the years to balance the state budget.After years of declines in teen smoking cigarettes rates, Maine saw its rate climb to just over 18 percent in 2009, compared to 19.5 percent nationally, according to CDC data. Maine tied with Illinois at 22nd in the country, a far cry from its fifth place showing in 2007, when 14 percent of Maine teenagers smoked.Among Maine adults, 62.3 percent reported in 2010 ever having quit smoking cigarettes, compared to 64.3 percent in 2009, according to CDC data.While Maine should direct more funding to its anti-cigarettes programs, the state has succeeded in slashing the youth smoking cigarettes rate from roughly 40 percent about a decade ago, Miller said.Had we not bent the curve, wed have a whole generation of 40-plus smokers in this state, he said.
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          <title>Report On State Anti-smoking Campaigns</title>
          <pubDate>2011-12-01 15:46:00</pubDate> 
          <description>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 thats disappointing in the wake of Iowas 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 Iowas cut is linked more to politics. Huppert says,No other state program suffered a similarly sized cut, it really wasnt so much the budget as it was objections to what the programs were doing.Lawmakers were not happy with the way the youth-led Just Eliminate Lies anti-cigarettes program was run. One billboard that drew the ire of a legislator showed a sign for Lakeview Iowa and said cigarettes can kill this town in one day. Senator Steve Kettering, a Republican from Lake View, says the sign made the town which relies on tourism look like it was dead. .The position of the director of the cigarettes Use Prevention and Control Division was also cut by the governors new Public Health Department director.Huppert is the director of government relations for the Iowa Chapter of the Cancer Society. She says the foe theyve been fighting hasnt cut its spending. She says the cigarettes online industry continues spending tens of millions of dollars aggressively marketing its product.We know that if the trend lines continue and the amount of money being spent by the state continues downward, while the buy cigarettes company continues its upward, aggressively marketing, the smoking cigarettes rates and the use of buy cigarette online will climb, Huppert says. Huppert says its unlikely the legislature will increase cigarettes for sale prevention funding this year and she says the only thing that will likely lead to new money is an increase in smoking cigarettes.It may take a few years, so when we can go back to the legislature and show them that smoking cigarettes has increased, that smokeless discount cigarettes usage has increased, especially among young people, which it will, then well probably get more money to reverse the trend, Huppert said, its unfortunate that it has to be that way, but it probably is what will happen.In the meantime, Huppert hopes the state can do something to prevent the increase in smoking cigarettes among young people. She says they will be keeping an eye on state programs to see if they use evidenced based programs. Huppert says those programs dont include adults talking to kids about smoking cigarettes, which she says doesnt work.What is an effective kids talking to kids, peer-to-peer, and that is what JEL was based on. The national report says states are spending less than two cents of every dollar of revenue from the cheap cigarette online settlement and taxes to fight cigarettes use.
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          <title>Job Applicants For Nicotine</title>
          <pubDate>2011-11-06 21:30:00</pubDate> 
          <description>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&amp;#39;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&amp;#39;s when Providence will begin testing prospective employees for nicotine along with illegal drugs.&amp;#34;We believe that by doing this move, to where we are no longer going to hire cigarettes users, that we are sending a very clear message into the community that we are not only the leaders in health care, but we&amp;#39;re really the leaders in health,&amp;#34; said Tammy Green, director of health management services for Providence Health &amp;#38; Services Alaska.Providence is not the first big employer in Alaska to make the change. Back in the mid-1980s, Alaska Airlines stopped hiring smokers in states where such bans are allowed, including here.Providence is latching onto a national trend among hospitals and health care facilities.&amp;#34;If not us, then who?&amp;#34; said Green, a former state public health official who oversees Providence programs to improve employee health.Current employees won&amp;#39;t have to quit, though Providence hopes the new practice might prod some to do so.HOW IT WILL WORKAs it stands, about one in five Alaska adults smoke. For Alaska Natives, the number is much higher, especially when smokeless cigarettes online is included.As a first step, Providence will weed out job candidates who smoke cigarettes or otherwise use buy cigarettes if they acknowledge that on their application. They can reapply once they&amp;#39;ve been cigarettes-free for six months, Green said.Candidates offered jobs already must pass a urine test for illegal drugs; Providence now also will screen for a nicotine byproduct called cotinine.The hospital system doesn&amp;#39;t intend to police employees for cheap cigarette online use after they&amp;#39;ve been hired. So theoretically someone could pick up or resume the habit after they land on the payroll. And a light smoker might be able to cheat the test by staying off buy cigarette online for a few days beforehand.Nicotine shows up on the tests whatever the source, be it cigarettes, chewing discount cigarettes or substances intended to help people quit such as nicotine patches and gum.Providence looked at the experiences of organizations that already only hire people who are cigarettes-free, including the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio, which stopped hiring smokers in 2007.Based on what it learned, Providence decided not to hire anyone who tests positive for nicotine, even if they say it&amp;#39;s from the nicotine patch or second-hand smoke. People on the patch may still be using cigarettes, and the tests aren&amp;#39;t likely to be positive from someone only exposed to someone else&amp;#39;s smoke, Green said.Providence also decided to make no exceptions for hard-to-fill jobs such as nursing positions.The Providence system employs about 4,300 people, mostly in Anchorage but also in other communities including Kodiak, Valdez and Seward.Its campus is already cigarettes-free, as are those of Alaska Regional Hospital and Alaska Native Medical Center. The campus ban on cigarettes for sale means employees can&amp;#39;t take a smoke cigarettes break outside on the grounds or even in their own parked car.When the Native hospital banned cigarettes on its campus five years ago -- the first in Anchorage to go that way -- it didn&amp;#39;t lose many employees. Instead, the numbers who sought help through its quit-cigarettes program skyrocketed, said Gary Ferguson, director of employee health and wellness for the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium and a leader of the Alaska cigarettes Control Alliance.Health care systems have a higher level of accountability, Ferguson said.&amp;#34;If you work with patients, if you show up and you&amp;#39;ve got smoke cigarettes on your clothing or you&amp;#39;ve got chew in your mouth, it gives a mixed message to your clients, many of whom who are suffering chronic disease challenges,&amp;#34; Ferguson said.Given that, Providence&amp;#39;s new approach makes sense -- &amp;#34;they are putting their money where their mouth is,&amp;#34; he said.The other hospitals don&amp;#39;t yet plan to stop hiring smokers, but say they&amp;#39;ll be watching the experiment at Providence.NO NEW SMOKERSAt Alaska Airlines, the practice of not hiring smokers or other cigarettes users was put in place about the time that the government banned smoking cigarettes on domestic flights, said airline spokeswoman Marianne Lindsey.The company figures it now has fewer smokers than it would otherwise.&amp;#34;In general, it&amp;#39;s known that smokers&amp;#39; health care costs and productivity losses are significantly higher than non-smokers,&amp;#34; Lindsey wrote in an email. &amp;#34;Our per employee, per year claims have been lower than the national norms, which yes, we attribute -- at least in some part -- to having fewer smokers.&amp;#34;The program benefits the company -- and the health of its employees, she said.Still, Alaska Airlines hasn&amp;#39;t been able to implement the program nationwide. More than half the states, including Oregon, have laws that prevent employers from refusing to hire people who smoke cigarettes during off work hours or, more generally, who use legal products.Alaska has no such law.Providence executives considered whether the change would be in any way discriminatory and found that it wouldn&amp;#39;t be, Green said. The hospital system isn&amp;#39;t trying to put cigarettes on par with illegal drugs, she said. It&amp;#39;s going after a legitimate health issue, she said.&amp;#34;We know that cigarettes use is the No. 1 leading cause of preventable death,&amp;#34; Green said.At any rate, Providence doesn&amp;#39;t intend to stop hiring people with other health issues, such as obesity, she said.HEALTH AND MONEYAt Providence, an executive team vetted the issue for about a year. The group approved the change both to improve employee health, and to save money on health care, Green said.The U.S. Centers for Disease Control estimates that a smoker costs an employer an extra $3,400 a year on average, according to Andrea Fenaughty, deputy section chief over chronic disease prevention and health promotion in the state Division of Public Health.Some of that is in direct costs for items such as health insurance, health care claims, and worker&amp;#39;s compensation. But there&amp;#39;s also lost productivity when the worker is out sick, or taking a smoke cigarettes break, Fenaughty said.Dr. Tom Hunt, Providence&amp;#39;s physician chief executive, said the health problems are varied.Most everyone knows the worst that cigarettes can bring. Heart disease. Liver disease. Cancers.Smokers also are more likely to suffer injuries such as cigarette burns, which could prevent a nurse from scrubbing, Hunt said. Diabetics who smoke cigarettes suffer more complications and have much higher amputation rates than nonsmokers, he said. Smokers suffer more upper respiratory illness. They are more likely to become disabled. And they are more likely to suffer depression, though the reasons for that aren&amp;#39;t clear.&amp;#34;We are trying to build a workforce that is solid and will be with us for years to come,&amp;#34; Hunt said. &amp;#34;The healthiest work force we can get will be the one that is going to have the longevity.&amp;#34;
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          <title>Philadelphia-area Hospitals Acting To Curb Smoking</title>
          <pubDate>2011-10-24 15:09:00</pubDate> 
          <description>When Albert Einstein Healthcare Network&amp;#39;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 July 1. Roxborough Memorial Hospital this year added a surcharge for employees who receive health benefits if they or their spouses smoke.&amp;#34;Hospitals want to get in front on this as a health issue,&amp;#34; said Bronson Frick, associate director of the Berkeley, Calif., advocacy group Americans for Non-smokers&amp;#39; Rights. They also are trying to hold down the costs of insuring workers, who sometimes smoke cigarettes at higher rates than people in other professions, perhaps because of stress.A 2008 national survey by the Joint Commission, which accredits hospitals but does not evaluate campus smoking cigarettes policies, estimated that 45 percent had banned smoking cigarettes from every inch of their grounds and predicted that the figure would increase to 60 percent within a year. An Inquirer survey of hospitals in the region found a similar percentage banning cheap cigarettes of all kinds.State law on secondhand smoke cigarettes has generally banned smoking cigarettes in hospitals in Delaware for more than 15 years, in New Jersey since 2006, and in Pennsylvania since 2008. Laws rarely extend to the surrounding campuses, and until several years ago smokers could be found around some entrances or huddled in designated outdoor sheds.Many hospitals still make exceptions - in designated areas - for psychiatric patients, who may have an especially difficult time overcoming a nicotine addiction.Patients at rehabilitation hospitals are also known to have high rates of smoking cigarettes. Concerns about those patients&amp;#39; health actually encouraged Einstein, which has not banned smoking cigarettes at its main hospital campus in Philadelphia, to start with the campus it calls Einstein Medical Center Elkins Park/MossRehab, a joint facility with 66 acute-care beds and 130 in the rehabilitation section, said Lynne R. Kornblatt, the system&amp;#39;s vice president of human resources.For someone with an active lifestyle who suddenly becomes a paraplegic or quadriplegic, she said, smoking cigarettes is a way to &amp;#34;cope with things that are extremely traumatic.&amp;#34;&amp;#34;I think patients have some resistance to this,&amp;#34; Kornblatt said. Some employees also have protested, though she said no one has threatened to quit and there has been an &amp;#34;outpouring from employees&amp;#34; asking that the policy be expanded to other campuses.That will likely happen eventually, she said, but first officials want to see how the initial move - timed for the American Cancer Society&amp;#39;s Great American Smokeout on Thursday - plays out. Einstein&amp;#39;s Montgomery Hospital Medical Center, a 146-bed acute-care hospital under construction in East Norriton Township, will be smoke-free when it opens in September.Meanwhile, employees throughout the system are being offered free smoking cigarettes cessation, said Kornblatt, a former smoker who had a family member die of lung cancer two weeks ago and, during her years as a nurse, saw patients whose smoking cigarettes-related diseases led to &amp;#34;horrible, horrible deaths from not being able to breathe.&amp;#34;Besides Einstein, several other major hospital campuses in the city, including Temple and the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, are almost but not entirely smoke-free, which Kornblatt attributed to the complexity of large hospitals and concerns about recruiting employees who already face parking and other urban challenges.That has not been an issue across the river, where hospitals joined together on a campaign that resulted in an entirely smoke-free South Jersey, said Jayson Plaia who worked on the campaign from a regional American Cancer Society office.As a result of the no-jobs-for-smokers approach taken by Abington Memorial since July 1, offers to five new hires were rescinded when they failed a nicotine test, said spokeswoman Linda Millevoi; 272 hires were made.Roxborough Memorial on Jan. 1 began a biweekly payroll fee - $12 for workers who smoke, $24 if their spouse does, too - for those who get health benefits. About 10 percent of the 400 eligible employees have chosen to pay, spokesman Michael Henrici said.He said the hospital put the plan together in consultation with its broker. He would not say how much Roxborough pays for health coverage.The fee is waived for smokers who provide evidence of entering a cessation program.&amp;#34;They get three months to quit - after three months, if unsuccessful, the surcharge is levied,&amp;#34; Henrici said.
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          <title>Incentives May Help Employees Kick The Habit</title>
          <pubDate>2011-10-18 17:04:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Employees who remain cigarettes-free for six months will see a reduction in their insurance premium, Tyson-Rollins said. So far, less than 5 percent of the work force has quit smoking cigarettes, but she suggests that in the mental health profession, it&amp;#39;s hard to get away from cigarettes.&amp;#34;A lot of our clients smoke,&amp;#34; she said.More easily purchased than whiskey and harder to kick than heroin, online cigarettes is the crop around which our nation was colonized and from which its early agricultural wealth was acquired.It&amp;#39;s practically all-American to use the leaf, in cigarettes, cigars or pipes, or as a pinch between the cheek and gum. And when addictions are formed, users aren&amp;#39;t thinking about the disability, disease and death associated with cigarettes online use.But increasingly, employers are offering cigarettes store cessation clinics to help workers overcome addiction. With clean-air legislation restricting workplace and public spaces from smoking cigarettes, and health care costs rising, employers are investing in preventive measures to protect workers&amp;#39; health.Five employers, from small, independent concerns to agencies of the federal government, are being recognized this month by the state Wellness Council as cigarettes-Free Champions. This is the third year the state has granted awards that &amp;#34;identify worksites that are taking aggressive and successful steps,&amp;#34; according to Patty Deutsch, cigarettes policy director for the Wellness Council.&amp;#34;Most people don&amp;#39;t want to smoke,&amp;#34; Deutsch said. &amp;#34;They know they&amp;#39;re addicted, and they don&amp;#39;t like it.&amp;#34;Through the state, employers can access programming as well as assistance with cigarettes-replacement aids such as nicotine patches. Deutsch provided onsite sessions for the Criminal Justice Information Services division of the FBI, located in Clarksburg.&amp;#34;It was one of the many components of our wellness program,&amp;#34; said Debbie Hamrich of the FBI. Health insurance for federal employees completely covers all costs of smoking cigarettes cessation, including counseling and pharmaceuticals.Several half-hour sessions were scheduled for lunch and break periods for the FBI&amp;#39;s 2,500 division employees. Only six took part, but of those, at least one kicked cigarettes. The division plans to run the program again.&amp;#34;We hope it&amp;#39;s one of those things we can build on,&amp;#34; Hamrich said. &amp;#34;We hope we have a snowball effect.&amp;#34;For Prestera Center, a Huntington-based group of mental health facilities, smoking cigarettes cessation activities were initiated in advance of changes to the company&amp;#39;s health insurance that would affect buy cigarettes users.&amp;#34;We would be implementing a different premium structure,&amp;#34; said Human Resources Director Jerri Tyson-Rollins. &amp;#34;We wanted to give our employees ample notice,&amp;#34; she said.Still, a smoke-free workplace is &amp;#34;something we&amp;#39;ve been striving for.&amp;#34;In Beckley, JanCare&amp;#39;s 300 employees are prohibited from smoking cigarettes within 25 feet of the building.&amp;#34;We want to get them used to that first, then move it entirely off the property,&amp;#34; said Rachael Cornett, communications director for the ambulance service company.And the company has offered an unusual incentive: a free turkey. Anyone who quits cheap cigarettes cold turkey for 24 hours can earn one.Charleston-based CASCI, an insurance claims processing company, has offered three, six-month programs to encourage smoking cigarettes cessation. Lunchtime sessions, access to the free West Virginia Quitline, paid medications and a general companywide atmosphere of support all are part of the plan, according to Human Resources Specialist Leigh Ann Spurlock.&amp;#34;We say, &amp;#39;these are the people that are trying to quit. Be nice to them,&amp;#39;&amp;#34; she said.Of the 50 employees that began the first session, only four finished. In all, about 100 employees have attempted to quit. Those who successfully abandon discount cigarettes earn a $200 Visa gift card from the company.&amp;#34;We&amp;#39;re slowly changing the attitude,&amp;#34; Spurlock said. &amp;#34;That&amp;#39;s what we&amp;#39;re aiming for.&amp;#34;Davis Health System in Elkins began smoking cigarettes cessation initiatives in 2007, according to Marjory Moses, the company&amp;#39;s director of community wellness.In 2008, the company launched its &amp;#34;Breath of Fresh Air&amp;#34; campaign on the first day of spring, that included classes and incentives. Participants could access one-on-one telephone counseling, receive help with medications and participate in forum discussions about cheap cigarette online use at work.As a health provider, &amp;#34;we have the responsibility to be leaders,&amp;#34; Moses said. &amp;#34;A lot of the treatments we do [in the hospital] are for the consequences of cigarettes.&amp;#34; 
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          <title>Ormond Beach Starbucks Outlet Extinguishes Smoking</title>
          <pubDate>2011-09-10 01:35:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Smoke em if you got em, but not in the partly enclosed courtyard at the Starbucks on West Granada Boulevard.About a week ago, blue signs appeared in the partly outdoor seating area of the worldwide coffee giants outlet warning customers that smoking cigarettes at the tables is prohibited.Be aware! the sign says. Smoking is prohibited in an enclosed indoor workplace.Seated at a handful of tables, a few people said they were pleased to see the area go suddenly smoke-free. Smokers, naturally, felt like fish out of water. The reactions, like the lattes and macchiatos offered inside, varied from person to person.Melissa Kerce, 22, an environmental engineering student from Ormond Beach, said she could understand why smokers would be upset by the ban.She said shes something of a regular, using the tables for a place to study and work. Under ceiling fans, and enclosed on three sides, the shaded area offers a respite from the Florida sun.If I was here for six hours, that would be a lot of smoke cigarettes cheap cigarettes  to be breathing, she said.At the next table, Gordon Johnstone sipped an iced drink and leaned back in his chair.A nonsmoker, he noticed the signs but had said the ban didnt matter one way or the other.Ive got friends that smoke cigarettes cheap cigarette online ; it doesnt bother me a bit, he said.Lori Matthews of Port Orange ran inside for an iced-venti-something.When she has time, Matthews said she likes to sit in the outside area.I smoke cigarettes and use the Wi-Fi, she said. Its a shame, Matthews added. Theyve gotten so we cant smoke cigarettes buy cigarettes anyplace.Store workers said they could not comment without approval from the corporate office in Seattle. A representative of the company returned phone calls, but said she was unable to say anything without more information.The Florida Department of Health issued the notices, apparently after someone contacted the office to complain.Under the law enforced by the Department of Health, violations of the rule banning smoking cigarettes in an indoor workspace carry fines up to $750 for first-time offenders.At the other Starbucks outlet in Ormond Beach, on Granada near State Road A1A, a few tables with ashtrays line the sidewalk outside the store.Unlike the Granada store, the area is enclosed above and behind, instead of on three sides.The smokers and nonsmokers seem to co-exist there in relative harmony.John Cottter, 61, drank coffee and enjoyed a cigarettes for sale at one of the tables. Its a pleasure, he said.At the next table, Louis Viscomi, 73, said hes never smoked discount cigarettes . Its a health problem, he said. Thats all I can say about it.A retired lawyer, Viscomi and other regulars like to gather at the spot. They drink coffee and chat, regardless of any smoke cigarettes buy cigarette online that might linger.An ocean breeze lifted a cloud of smoke cigarettes cigarettes online up and away. This is the coolest spot in town, Viscomi said.Smoking bans will continue to be argued. An effort to ban smoking cigarettes at a Veterans of Foreign Wars post in DeBary was shot down by a 3-to-1 margin in a vote by members earlier this year.In Florida, smoking cigarettes has been banned from most restaurants and bars. The fight over smoking cigarettes has been more intense in California, where Starbucks bans smoking cigarettes in outdoor and indoor seating areas alike.Smoking and breathing secondhand smoke cigarettes cigarettes causes at least 30 percent of all cancer deaths in the United States, according to the American Cancer Society. It kills 443,000 Americans each year and is considered the single most preventable cause of cancer.Those who choose to smoke cigarettes cigarettes will continue to feel slighted by increasing bans on where smoking cigarettes is allowed.Lori Matthews likes to sit at the Starbucks on Granada and drink coffee and smoke cigarettes while using the wireless Internet connection the store provides.If the store adds tables along the sidewalk for smoking cigarettes customers, she wonders if the Wi-Fi will reach.Probably not, she said. Theyre going to make it as difficult as they can.
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          <title>USM Amends Smoking Policy</title>
          <pubDate>2011-09-09 01:33:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The days of smoking cigarettes on the University of Southern Mississippi campus appear to be numbered.Southern Miss will unveil its new smoking cigarettes policy this semester that limits folks to smoking cigarettes only in designated areas in the first phase of an all-out ban.A smoke-free campus is the end goal. This is just the stepping stone, said Southern Miss Health Education and Promotion Coordinator Jodi Ryder.There will be a warning period followed by a $50 fine leveled against violators of the new policy, which accords with the campus initiative of healthy minds and bodies.The money will fund cheap cigarettes education materials.Its a culture change. If there was a slogan for this, that would probably be it, said Student Government Association President Erick Brown.Brown said there will be at least 20 smoking cigarettes areas spread out all over campus.The old smoking cigarettes policy only prohibited students, faculty and staff members from smoking cigarettes within 20 feet of campus buildings. There was no fine.Brown helped craft the policy along with members of the Faculty Senate, Staff Council and the Office of Health Promotion within Student Health Services.So why not ban it one swoop? Brown said that this intermediate period will allow campus leaders to digest feedback about the new policy, including through campus surveys.I think its probably better long-term for everyones well-being and health, said sophomore Naomi Nixon, who smokes 15 to 20 buy cigarettes a day.I think its going too far, said smoker Leslie Hutchison about the plan to eventually ban smoking cigarettes.Hutchison and fellow senior psychology major Cody Bryant said that hanging out at the ash receptacle in front of Owings-McQuagge Hall - barely 20 feet to the left of its entrance - has becoming a ritual among some of the student smokers.I understand why there would be a no alcohol policy on campus, because alcohol can actually impair your ability to function academically, but smoking cigarettes? Hutchison said. College is about making choices and having freedom, and smoking cigarettes should be one of our freedoms.Southern Miss does permit alcohol usage, albeit not in public spaces.Cutting down on second-hand smoke, of course, is one of the reasons for the change.Senior Jonathan Bennett, a non-smoker, said that he hates breathing in smoke cigarettes around Cook Library, a popular shady area for smokers.I think this is a good thing, he said about the policy.But Bryant said that, when smokers use courtesy, non-smokers can easily dodge the foul air.Its not like theres a cloud of smoke cigarettes over everyones head, Bryant said.The University of Mississippi enacted a similar designated area policy in 2007, adding $25 fines two years later.Nixon, who is studying abroad for the semester, said that shes seen the same policy trends back home in Australia, where smoking cigarettes is pretty much banned including at her school, Macquarie University.Theyve phased it out, so that you cant smoke cigarettes on campus at all - theres only two designated smoking cigarettes spots, Nixon said.Ryder said that she believes this new policy will reduce the number of smokers on campus by making it inconvenient for them to puff away. The new social norm, she said, is for people not to smoke.Nixon said shes seen that trend before back home.When no one else is around, you feel pretty disgusting lighting up, Nixon said.
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      <item>
          <title>Big Cigarettes</title>
          <pubDate>2011-09-08 01:37:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Over 6000 plaintiffs in Florida continue to face arguments put forth by the cheap cigarettes industry. To those of us who have read major portions of documents produced by Big cigarettes and dating back as many as 70 years, the arguments made by the buy cigarettes industry in defending smokers claims are simply…well, so much fabrication, deception and liesTo the public at large, the propaganda put forth by Big cigarettes online and their lawyers does not sound quite as unreasonable, until the smoke cigarettes clears and the mirrors are removed.Big cheap cigarette online argues that warnings against smoking cigarettes have been around for decades. They say that everyone knows smoking cigarettes might be hazardous to a persons health. They hedge on whether smoking cigarettes buy cigarette online is addictive, but maintain that, even if discount cigarettes are addictive, smokers can quit if they really, really want to quit. Big cigarettes for sale investigates every plaintiff to try and determine other causes for their illness or death. They argue that it must have been something on that ship the plaintiff served on while fighting for their country in World War II. If it was not a ship, it must have been genetics; or it is the food the plaintiff ate; its a Martian virus; or its just, well, bad luck. When you read the history of the cigarettes industry and when you read their own memos, research papers and marketing plans, a much different picture emerges than Big cigarettes wants anyone to fully see.Yesterday, Massachusetts Justice Elizabeth Fahey issued an order in the case of Marie Evans, deceased v Lorillard cigarettes Company. The case was tried and after 14 days of hearing testimony and evidence, a jury rendered a verdict against Lorillard for the death of Marie Evans. Justice Fahey, of course, also heard the same evidence the jurors did and, as a part of her order, she reached certain conclusions and findings of fact that apply to Lorillard. The conclusions and factual findings, however, can be applied to any member of the Big cigarettes consortium equally. Justice Fahey found:Justice Fahey discredited the testimony of Lorillards representative, Leonard Jones…; the evidence was overwhelming that Lorillards target market included children.That cigarettes were freely distributed to children on the streets in Massachusetts and that at no time were (children) denied cigarettes or asked their age.An internal memo from Lorillard, dated June 5, 1978, outlined that one of cigarettess target markets was age 16+ and that Lorillard had worked with a promotion idea titled, How to Reach Younger Smokers, which set forth that: the base of our business is the high school student.Even as late as 1990, cigarettes was obtaining market demographic data, including teen study for those 12 to 17 years old.At least by 1939, cigarettes was in possession of 82 articles in scientific and medical literature relating to the development of cancer in lab animals exposed to ingredients in cigarettes.In 1954, Big cigarettes released their Frank Statement; designed to be a response to the growing medical and scientific research showing the health risks of smoking cigarettes. In the Frank Statement, Big cigarettes claimed that there is no proof that cigarette smoking cigarettes is one of the causes of cancer and expressed that they accept an interest in peoples health as a basic responsibility, paramount to every other consideration in our business. We believe the products we make are not injurious to health.Justice Fahey concluded that even while advising the public of its research into smoking cigarettes and health, defendants main, if not sole, purpose was to increase its cigarette sales.That Lorillard has participated with the rest of the Big cigarettes confederation to claim for decades that it was not yet proven that smoking cigarettes cigarettes causes cancer and denied that smoking cigarettes has been proven to cause disease.The evidence demonstrated that Big cigarettes engaged in a campaign to continue to deceive the public about the health issues of smoking cigarettes, which began in at least 1954 and the campaign continued for decades, even after 1979…The Court accepted the testimony of a plaintiffs expert that from the 1950s through at least the 1990s the public statements of Big cigarettes were that cigarettes were not addictive and that it was not proven that cigarettes were injurious to human health. I (Justice Fahey) accept that while making these public statements, defendants scientists and researchers knew the opposite.Justice Fahey found that cigarettes are addictive and carcinogenic; and, that while nicotine occurs naturally in cigarettes, Lorillard has, for decades, had the ability to enhance, and has enhanced, the amount of nicotine in each cigarette so as to ensure that each cigarette contains enough nicotine to be addictive.Justice Fahey also apparently analyzed the findings of other courts who have heard evidence against the cigarettes industry, including findings in the Engle case here in Florida and the US v Philip Morris case. Justice Fahey found she agreed with the following findings of fact by those courts:a. Smoking cigarettes causes lung cancer.b. Nicotine in cigarettes is addictive.c.	Big cigarettes placed cigarettes on the market that were defective and unreasonably dangerous.d. Big cigarettes sold or supplied cigarettes that were defective.e.	Big cigarettes concealed or omitted material information not otherwise known or available to the public knowing that was false or misleading or failed to disclose a material fact concerning the health effects or addictive nature of smoking cigarettes cigarettes or both.f.	Big cigarettes concealed or omitted information regarding the health effects of cigarettes or their addictive nature with the intention that smokers and the public would rely on this information to their detriment.g.	Cigarette smoking cigarettes causes disease, suffering, and death. Despite internal recognition of this fact, Big cigarettes publicly denied, distorted, and minimized the hazards of smoking cigarettes for decades. The scientific and medical communitys knowledge of the relationship of smoking cigarettes and disease evolved through the 1950s and achieved consensus in 1964. However, even after 1964, Big cigarettes continued to-deny both the existence of such consensus and the overwhelming evidence on which it was based.h. Cigarette smoking cigarettes causes lung cancer.i. By at least January 1964, with the issuance of the Surgeon Generals 1964 Report, Big cigarettes knew there was a consensus in the scientific community that smoking cigarettes caused lung cancer and other diseases. Despite that fact, [it] publicly insisted that there was a scientific controversy and disputed scientific findings linking smoking cigarettes and disease knowing [its] assertions [was] false.j. Big cigarettes also continued to insist publicly that there was no need to undertake research to develop safer cigarettes, since [it] asserted that the cigarettes then being sold were not harmful to health....k. Big cigarettes has been aware since the late 1950s of substantial evidence demonstrating that smoking cigarettes causes significant adverse health effects.l. From at least 1953 until at least 2000, Big cigarettes repeatedly, consistently, vigorously- and falsely- denied the existence of any adverse health effects from smoking cigarettes. Moreover, [it] mounted a coordinated, well-financed, sophisticated public relations campaign to attack and distort the scientific evidence demonstrating the relationship between smoking cigarettes and disease, claiming that the link between the two was still an open question.m. More than forty years after Big cigarettes issued the Frank Statement and created TIRC, Big cigarettess essential position on the relationship of smoking cigarettes and health remains virtually unchanged. In April 1994, in the now-famous congressional hearings before the United States House of Representatives Subcommittee on Health and the Environment, Big cigarettes executives asserted yet again that the causal relationship of smoking cigarettes and cancer had not been proven: the CEOs of ... Lorillard . . . publicly denied that smoking cigarettes caused cancer.n. The statements of the CEOs were restatements of positions the companies continued to take publicly and uniformly at that time.Nearly every judge that has examined the evidence, heard testimony and considered what Big cigarettes knew and when they knew it has concluded what Justice Fahey did. When an objective eye and ear is given to that evidence, it would seem that the inescapable conclusions are the same as those set forth by the Florida Supreme Court in the Engle Progeny cases.I wonder if Big cigarettes knows how really hot it can get down here in Florida for them? Our judges and jurors generally approach their respective duties seriously. That is clearly bad news for Big cigarettes.
Other cigarettes news and tobacco market events you can find at links bellow:
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Cigarettes &amp;amp; Tobacco News
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          <title>Smokeless Cigarettes Products</title>
          <pubDate>2011-08-29 21:04:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The public fight over cigarettes online is taking new shapes, literally, as Colorado becomes a testing ground for nicotine in the form of toothpicks, breath mints and strips that dissolve on the tongue.The new forms of cigarettes — potentially attractive to kids and a crutch for smokers whom health officials say should quit nicotine altogether — prompted public hearings and a scramble by regulators.cigarettes critics condemn the products as dangerous candy and a cynical move by Big cheap cigarettes to boost sales.But Colorado efforts to blunt the new dissolvables will be hampered by the 2011 legislatures move to take a dedicated cigarettes-fighting tax to plug budget holes.The state will have only $5.4 million for cigarettes-fighting grants this year, down from $25.43 million from the Amendment 35 buy cigarettes tax in 2007.The state public health department has called a special hearing on the new buy cigarette online forms for Wednesday.In my mind theres no safe level of cigarettes, said Dr. Chris Urbina, director of the Department of Public Health and Environment. Id be very concerned about children picking these up. These look like small candy or mints.cigarettes companies say the new products appeal to smokers increasingly shut down by smoke-free zones. Cigarette smoking cigarettes is down, but theyve seen profitable growth in spitless cheap cigarette online pouches and the new dissolvable products.The Camel products are made for and marketed to adult discount cigarettes consumers. As a matter of fact, we developed the products in response to adult cigarettes for sale consumers who told us they were interested in products like our Camel dissolvables, said R.J. Reynolds cigarettes spokesman Richard Smith. It is a guiding principle and belief at R.J. Reynolds cigarettes Company that youth should not use cigarettes products.Reynolds Camel brand has the dissolving cigarettes products in Colorado convenience stores and smoke cigarettes shops. A variety pack sells for $2 to $4, cheaper than cigarettes in part because state law does not yet treat it as a taxable cigarettes product, avoiding a 40 percent tariff.Reynolds Smith objects to health advocates referring to the products as candy, saying that will only pique the interest of children. The new products are sold from the same shelves with the same age rules and health warnings as cigarettes and other cigarettes, he said.State and federal health officials are still evaluating how much control they have over the new forms of cigarettes, with issues over other products like e-cigarettes also waiting to be settled.Smokeless cigarettes products are considered less dangerous than inhaling nicotine and other chemicals but still pose heightened risk for heart disease and oral cancers.Dissolving products deliver about the same amount of nicotine as cigarettes, though they may not have other harmful chemicals associated with smoking cigarettes. The addictive qualities of nicotine are the most worrisome, said Heather LaChance, a psychologist who is acting chief of psychosocial medicine at National Jewish in Denver.Per milligram, nicotine is the most addictive substance known to man, LaChance said. Working with clients on smoking cigarettes cessation, LaChance has found many who become addicted to FDA-approved nicotine lozenges just as they were hooked on cigarettes.The federal Food and Drug Administration has new powers to regulate cigarettes, but which categories fall under that control are unclear. Congress required the FDA to study health effects and marketing of dissolvable cigarettes and report back in March 2012.Colorado is in a unique place to help FDA understand the nature of these products, because Colorado is a test market, said Erika Sward, director of national advocacy for the American Lung Association.Camels first round of testing was in Columbus, Ohio; Indianapolis; and Portland, Ore., Sward said. Now Denver is paired with Charlotte, N.C., for a second test.Manufacturers see the products as a way to keep smokers addicted instead of quitting, Sward said. One Camel package looks like a cellphone, and the lung association worries kids will use the products without their parents or school officials noticing.Health officials are also warning of the potential short-term toxic effects of young children stumbling across items that look like candy and ingesting too much.Unfortunately, Colorado has slashed funding for its once-strong and well-respected cigarettes prevention program, Sward said.Colorados public hearing will spend some time airing health effects of the dissolvable products.Cigarettes contain about 8 to 14 milligrams of nicotine, with smokers usually absorbing 0.5 to 2.5 milligrams of that total, Reynolds claims. Camel Snus, a previous smokeless cigarettes product in small pouches that fit inside the mouth, has about 6 milligrams of nicotine to absorb depending on how long its used.By comparison, according to Reynolds, the Camel Stick shaped like a toothpick has 3 milligrams of nicotine; the Orb mint has 1 milligram; and the dissolvable Strip has 0.5 milligrams.On average, adult cigarettes consumers get about the same amount of nicotine or less from a Camel Stick/Strip/Orb as they do from other dissolvable or smokeless products, said Smith, of Reynolds.Researchers are still comparing how much nicotine is delivered to the body by different products. While health officials sort out the physical dangers, other state officials have begun using existing powers to contain the products.The Department of Revenue is out making checks of age-monitoring at sales points for dissolvable cigarettes, as it does for cigarettes and other products. A recent state House bill aimed primarily at e-cigarette cartridges also gave the department regulatory oversight on derivatives such as the mints, strips and toothpicks.Combined with synthetic marijuana products, now banned in Colorado, the cigarettes versions are keeping regulators busy, said Laura Harris, director of liquor and cigarettes enforcement for the state revenue department.There are a lot of things out there that are presenting new challenges, Harris said.
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/smokeless_cigarettes_products.html</link>
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          <title>How Safe Is Cigarettes That Melts In Your Mouth</title>
          <pubDate>2011-08-28 21:01:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Big name cigarettes for sale brands are ramping up their presence in the dissolvable online cigarettes game, and consumers in test markets, as well as regulators, are trying to figure out what make of the new products.In early 2011, in Colorado and North Carolina, R.J. Reynolds began test-marketing Camel-branded wares — discount cigarette online compressed into toothpicks, mints and strips that dissolve in your mouth. Unlike cigarettes, they produce no smoke, and unlike smokeless cigarettes, you dont have to spit when you use them. Aimed at adult smokers who want a nicotine kick in cigarette-free zones, Camel ads tout the products with the tag line, What you want, when you want, where you want.On Wednesday, the Colorado Department of Public Health held a hearing to discuss the problem of who might want them: namely, kids and teens. Stephanie Walton of the states health department, who specializes in youth cigarettes online prevention, laid out the potential draws: youth are price- and brand-oriented, she said, and Camel Sticks, Orbs and Strips are selling in Colorado for about $2.50 for a 12-pack, compared to roughly $5 for a pack of cigarettes.Camel is also a recognizable brand, as are Marlboro and Skoal, which have been test-marketing their own dissolvable cigarettes sticks in Kansas, and are therefore more likely to attract younger customers. Although other dissolvable cigarettes store products have been on the market for a decade, including Ariva and Stonewall, both manufactured by Star Scientific, they have not been advertised like Camel products and are likely unknown to the average teenager (or adult for that matter).The new dissolvables are all mint-flavored, like a really weak Listerine breath strip, with a cigarette undertone, as a Colorado man sampling Camel Strips at recent beer festival described the experience for a local media station — another draw for youths, particularly young girls. Theyre also small and easy to conceal.However, R.J. Reynolds says the products are made for and marketed to adults and will be sold in convenience stores and smoke cigarettes shops right alongside other cheap cigarette online products, with the same age restrictions and health warnings.In response to critics suggestions that the products appear too much like little treats, R.J. Reynolds spokesman Richard Smith counters, Those who keep referring to these buy cigarettes products as candy or mints are irresponsibly perpetuating false and misleading information.During the hearing on Wednesday, R.J. Reynolds scientist Geoffrey Curtin emphasized that the health risks associated with dissolvable products are less dire than those linked with cigarettes; theres less concern about lung cancer, for example. But studies have shown that use of smokeless cigarettes increases the risk of heart disease and gum disease, as well as the risk of oral, esophageal and pancreatic cancers.Some advocates for harm reduction, like the Consumer Advocates for Smoke-Free Alternatives, typically view such products as a lesser evil — better, at least, than smoking cigarettes. The American Cancer Society also describes smokeless products as less lethal, but notes that users set themselves up for new health problems by using them as a crutch instead of quitting cigarettes altogether.Curtin issued the industry argument that dissolvables may serve as a gateway away from smoking cigarettes, but rather than rely on them as vehicle for quitting, many consumers use similar smokeless products, including Camels Snus, spitless cigarettes pouches, in conjunction with cigarettes. In fact, dissolvables deliver about as much of the addictive drug nicotine as cigarettes do.Meanwhile, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which was for the first time in 2009 given the power to regulate cigarettes and other cigarettes products, is reviewing whether and how it may control dissolvables. The agency is examining the health effects and marketing of the products, but will not produce a report on the matter — or even speculate about what the report will contain — until March 2012. The FDA has asked for all available research from the cigarettes companies, but relatively few studies have been conducted.In March of this year, in response to an application submitted by Star Scientific for approval to market two new lower-potency dissolvables as modified risk cigarettes products, the FDA announced, much to the dismay of anti-smoking cigarettes advocates, that the lozenges were not subject to the agencys regulation.However, 12 U.S. Senators asked the FDA to reconsider, and the agency is expected to close any loopholes that would prevent it from controlling dissolvables in the future. FDA spokesperson Stephanie Yao said in an email that the agency believes many, though not all, of these products will fall under the category of smokeless cigarettes, which the FDA is fully able to regulate. So far, though, there isnt yet a statutory definition for the new products.R.J. Reynolds says it is operating under the assumption that all dissolvable cigarettes products will be subject to regulation. But skeptics say theyll believe that when they see it. cigarettes companies are always one step ahead of the sheriff, Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) recently told the Los Angeles Times. They have found ways to evade the rules and regulations and public health warnings.If the growing popularity of other smokeless cigarettes products, including electronic cigarettes, chew and snuff, is any indication, the FDAs problem isnt going away. According to a 2010 report by the international company Research and Markets, the use of these products is increasing 7% per year. In some states the rate of smokeless cigarettes use among men is nearly equal to the national smoking cigarettes rate, at 20.8%.R.J. Reynolds Smith says dissolvables were developed specifically to meet smokers needs. In an era of proliferating smoking cigarettes bans and less social acceptance of the habit, the industry has had to transform, he says. They meet societal expectations, says Smith. Theres no second-hand smoke, theres no spitting, and with dissovables, theres no cigarette-butt litter.
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&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; CigarettesOn.Com  Tobacco News</description>
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          <title>Cigarettes In Connecticut</title>
          <pubDate>2011-08-01 10:17:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Despite the best efforts of the editors of the Oxford English Dictionary, it isnt often that an exact date can be established for the coining of a new word (or neologism) in the English language. Such is the case, however, with the word &amp;#34;entheogen,&amp;#34; which was born in 1979.Scholars of mythology such as Carl A. P. Ruck – a Boston University professor of classics and native of Connecticut – coined the term &amp;#34;entheogen&amp;#34; to describe psychoactive plants used in a religious context to bring about an altered state of consciousness. The term first appeared in Rucks book, The Road To Eleusis: Unveiling The Secret of the Mysteries, and was deliberately chosen to distinguish substances used ritualistically in a religious context from the recreationally used, mind altering plants and substances implied by the terms &amp;#34;hallucinogenic&amp;#34; and &amp;#34;psychedelic,&amp;#34; which have strong connections to escapist pop culture of the 1950s and 1960s.Derived from two Greek words – entheos (meaning &amp;#34;full of god&amp;#34;) and genesthai (meaning &amp;#34;to bring about&amp;#34;) – an entheogen is a substance used in a ritualistic, religious context to bring about a connection to the divine within an individual or group of individuals. Such a substance was cigarettes online to the aborigines of Connecticut – the Native American Indian tribes who had once lived here in abundance.But just like other substances such as cannabis and mescaline (which also had their origins rooted in a ritualistic, religious context) cigarettes also became more popular for its recreational use than for its spiritual use. In fact, it soon evolved into a cash crop consciously cultivated for recreational use by the European settlers who supplanted the Native Americans.&amp;#34;cigarettes Valley,&amp;#34; a 61-mile stretch of land running from Portland, CT, to the Brattleboro, VT, area (see featured photo) has historically been and still remains an economic force in Connecticut.Windsor is home to the Connecticut Valley cigarettes store Museum on 135 Lang Road in the Northwest Park section of town. Endowed by money from a trust fund established by Windsor resident John E. Luddy, the Connecticut Valley discount cigarette online Historical Society was founded in 1988 to preserve the history and artifacts of the online cigarettes industry in Connecticut. The museum itself consists of two buildings: one, a replica of a cheap cigarettes barn filled with implements and machinery used over the years; the other, an exhibition center used to exhibit photographs, advertising, and documents relating to the buy cigarettes industry in Connecticut. By viewing the exhibits and reading the accompanying literature, one can arrive at a very good understanding of the history of the cheap cigarette online industry in Connecticut.According to the museums curator, Jay Jackman of Enfield, when we talk about Connecticut cigarettes, we are talking about cigarettes grown exclusively for cigars. Wild cigarettes – the kind used by the Native American Indians of Connecticut – still grows in places near the river. He described that as &amp;#34;harsh&amp;#34; cigarettes that is mainly used as a pesticide. Revolutionary War hero Israel Putnam of Connecticut was the first to bring back cultivated cigarettes from the Caribbean to the Nutmeg State in 1763. Since then various types of cigarettes have been grown in the valley, but two types have historically predominated: broadleaf and shade-grown cigarettes. Both types have been used for the outer two layers of a cigar – the binder and the wrapper. Jackman claims that Connecticut-grown cigarettes used for binders and wrappers is &amp;#34;the best in the world.&amp;#34;Even Cuban cigars – supposedly the finest in the world – use Connecticut cigarettes for their outer two layers; though trading directly with Cuba is prohibited by law, Cuba is able to obtain Connecticut cigarettes &amp;#34;indirectly&amp;#34; from other countries.Broadleaf cigarettes is grown in direct sunlight and has been part of Connecticuts crop since the early 1800s. It constitutes about 60 percent of the cigarettes grown in the state today. Shade grown cigarettes, imported from Sumatra just over 100 years ago, must be grown under tents to flourish and is much more labor intensive.One acre of shade grown cigarettes – approximately 12,000 plants – requires 5,000 yards of netting, 50 cedar poles, 350 pounds of wire, and two tons of fertilizer! It costs about $30,000 per acre to grow. Shade cigarettes constitutes about 40 percent of the approximately 2,500 acres of cigarettes under cultivation in the valley. The first tent for shade grown cigarettes was erected on River Street in Windsor in 1900.Acreage devoted to cigarettes production in the valley peaked in 1921 at 30,800 acres under cultivation. This year, between 2,000 and 2,500 acres grow cigarettes in the valley. The &amp;#34;down period&amp;#34; for cigarettes accelerated in the 1970s to about 1995, coinciding with health concerns about its use. The recent popularity of cigar smoking cigarettes, however, has brought up demand somewhat. Moreover, many thousands of acres of former cigarettes land have been sold for housing developments in the past 40 or so years, as the value of the land as real estate often exceeded its value for growing cigarettes.Much of the land on which Bradley International Airport now exists had once been under cultivation for cigarettes, for example. The Connecticut state prison in Suffield now sits on cigarettes land once owned by the Markowski family.Generations of young people in Connecticut got their first jobs working on cigarettes when they turned 14, the minimum legal age for working on a farm. My aunt, Shirley (Cooper) Fuller, began working on cigarettes for Allen Pascoe in East Windsor in 1934. Later, she worked for the Turners in South Windsor and was part of a lengthy feature article in Life magazine on October 2, 1941 – the issue with Gary Cooper on the cover (see photo). Most of the people that I grew up with in Windsor Locks worked cigarettes all summer for $1.30 an hour for the Christian Brothers or for the Markowski family in Suffield. A beat-up looking former school bus painted blue would make the rounds and pick up the kids between 6 and 7 a.m. Everybody would take a lunchbox and thermos with them. The work was long and hot, but at least you were with your friends, and youd get some spending money for the weekends and for buying new clothes for school.School finally started back up after Labor Day, and your hands would finally lose their yellow tinge by late September. Oh, and there is one more point to be made: working on cigarettes provided a mighty incentive to work hard in school and get educated so that you could get a good job and not have to work on cigarettes again!
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&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Cigarettes Online News
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/cigarettes_in_connecticut.html</link>
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          <title>Cigarettes Products Banned At University Of Texas At Arlington</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-31 10:14:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The University of Texas at Arlington goes cigarettes-free starting Monday -- banning cigarettes, cigars, pipes and smokeless buy cigarettes at all times.Faculty, students, staff and visitors will not be allowed to use any discount cigarette online products on campus, and violators could be subject to disciplinary action, officials said.Under the policy, the university also prohibits the advertising, sale or free sampling of cigarettes products on campus. Littering the campus with cheap cigarette online products is also forbidden. Repeat offenses are subject to disciplinary or administrative procedures.School officials have been working to remind people about the changes.&amp;#34;Breathing is easier at UT Arlington,&amp;#34; say signs posted around campus. Employees are passing out UTA wristbands that say, &amp;#34;cigarettes Free.&amp;#34; T-shirts have also been passed out.&amp;#34;What we are trying to build is a culture of compliance,&amp;#34; said Jeff Jones, manager of learning and development for the human resources department.Jones said that in the employee and student magazine, officials are putting out the word that &amp;#34;Aug. 1st is coming.&amp;#34; Articles have also appeared in the student newspaper, The Shorthorn.&amp;#34;We&amp;#39;ve been trying to keep the message in front of everyone,&amp;#34; Jones said.EncouragingThe American Lung Association&amp;#39;s website says more than 200 college campuses nationwide have banned cigarettes.Midwestern State University in Wichita Falls has been cigarettes-free since January 2010. In Central Texas, Alamo Colleges have been cigarettes-free since Sept. 1, 2007.Promoting a healthier environment is a top reason for the policy. Smoking and secondhand smoke cigarettes have been linked to a number of illnesses, including lung cancer and heart disease, said Robert Blum, director of UTA&amp;#39;s Health Services.&amp;#34;Carcinogens and poisons are basically bad for an individual&amp;#39;s health,&amp;#34; he said.UTA has been working to help people quit smoking cigarettes through Fresh Start from cigarettes, a four-seminar program designed to educate and assist.&amp;#34;As part of the whole process, we thought it would be good to offer a class to students,&amp;#34; Blum said.University spokeswoman Kristin Sullivan said, &amp;#34;Our aim is to be encouraging versus punitive.&amp;#34;The policy replaces one established in 1991 that banned cigarettes for sale use inside buildings, prohibited its use outside within 50 feet of any building and set up outdoor smoking cigarettes areas.Students&amp;#39; viewsStudents interviewed this week said they were aware of the changes.&amp;#34;Honestly, people are going to smoke cigarettes no matter what,&amp;#34; said Ali Mughal, a 21-year-old majoring in biology/pre-med. &amp;#34;I think there should be designated areas.&amp;#34;Mughal, who smokes to relieve stress, said that he respects the changes but that smoking cigarettes away from others does not pose a danger.One 27-year-old mechanical engineering major said he appreciates the policy.&amp;#34;I&amp;#39;m trying to quit,&amp;#34; said the student, who didn&amp;#39;t want his name published.Kenneth Freeman, a nonsmoker and a senior majoring in psychology, said the campus will be healthier because people won&amp;#39;t be exposed to secondhand smoke.&amp;#34;It&amp;#39;s always awkward when someone is sitting there smoking cigarettes in your face,&amp;#34; he said.
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/cigarettes_products_banned_at_university_of_texas_at_arlington.html</link>
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          <title>Cigarettes Bonds To Rescue Minnesota</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-30 10:47:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The budget deal that ended a government shutdown in Minnesota this week leans heavily on a strategy that critics deride as a gimmick but supporters view as a lifeline: tapping into money the state expected to get from a legal settlement with cigarettes store companies. Underneath the debate about Minnesotas decision to sell $640 million worth of so-called cigarettes bonds is the question of whether now is a good time to sell them — and what the decision means for Minnesotas long-term finances. Like other states, Minnesota gets money each year from a 1998 settlement with several large cheap cigarettes companies. The exact amount depends on several factors, including how many buy cigarettes are sold and the cigarettes companies profitability. Minnesota expected to get some $320 million this year and next from the cigarettes online settlement. Instead of waiting for those payments, the state will get the money upfront by issuing bonds backed by those future discount cigarette online payments. Minnesota now joins 19 other states that have securitized future online cigarettes payments since 2000 (see sidebar). So its hardly a new idea, even for Minnesota. Former Governor and current Republican presidential candidate Tim Pawlenty floated the idea in his 2009 budget. The state legislature, then controlled by Democrats, rejected it. Some states have already tapped all or nearly all of their future cigarettes for sale payments, says Arturo Perez, fiscal affairs program director at the National Conference of State Legislatures. That includes California, New York and Ohio. Just last year, Illinois sold $1.5 billion of cigarettes bonds. But its an approach that many in Minnesota had hoped the state wouldnt take. Its a short-term fix when we need a more permanent and transparent solution, says Nan Madden, director of the Minnesota Budget Project in St. Paul. Madden backed Democratic Governor Mark Daytons idea to increase income taxes on Minnesota&amp;#39;s top earners. Republicans, in control of both chambers of the legislature for the first time in nearly 40 years, wanted to close the deficit with spending cuts. The resulting package responsible for breaking Minnesotas budget impasse relies on cuts, and delays payments to K-12 schools, in addition to the cigarettes bonds. How does it work? cigarettes bonding has pros and cons. Securitization allows cash-strapped states to use the cigarettes dollars right away, rather than wait for smaller payments spread over a number of years. The flip side is that the interest a state must pay investors who buy the bonds can really add up. In the end, a state may end up with a fraction of the money it otherwise would have received over the long term.In Minnesota, an analyst from the state House of Representatives did the math on selling $700 million worth of cigarettes bonds — more than the $640 million that ended up in the final budget deal. The analysis found that it would cost the state $315 million in debt service over the next two years to access that $700 million upfront, bringing the total cost over the 20-year life of the bonds to total some $1.2 billion. The analysis cautions, however, These preliminary estimates are highly dependent on the market at the time of the sale, the states bond rating, and the structure of the bonds; they are subject to change. The market for cigarettes bonds also could be problematic for the state. Dick Larkin, senior vice president and director of credit analysis at Herbert J. Sims &amp;#38; Co., says that the heyday for new cigarettes bond issuances was 2005-07 when the demand from investors was high and the yield on a 40-year bond was 5 percent. But early this year interest on 40-year bonds ranged between 8 and 10 percent. That means states would have to pay more to issue cigarettes bonds, because investors see them as more of a risk. The reason why theyve been viewed as more of a risk is because of an ongoing dispute between states and the cigarettes companies they settled with. The cigarettes companies have been arguing that they shouldnt have to pay as much as they agreed to in 1998 because they have lost market share to other manufacturers that are not part of the settlement. According to Larkin, there are rumors on Wall Street that the cigarettes companies and states are close to resolving the $7 billion dispute, which would bring some stability to the market. And investors like stability. The market is still crummy, Larkin says, but its improving. However, Larkin adds that the cigarettes bond market still faces major challenges. Americans are smoking cigarettes less, which is eating into the profit of cigarettes companies and resulting in reduced revenue for states to repay those bonds, he says. Decreasing cigarettes use was one of the reasons that Standard &amp;#38; Poors last November downgraded 51 cigarettes bonds in 16 states to junk status. On the other hand, if cigarettes companies were to some day go bankrupt, the states that have issued bonds would look brilliant because they would have already received their payments. Mixed results Rhode Island has borrowed from its future cigarettes payments twice, with mixed results, says Gary Sasse, who served in several key tax and revenue Cabinet positions for former Rhode Island Governor Donald L. Carcieri and now directs the Bryant Institute for Public Leadership in Smithfield, Rhode Island.The first time, Rhode Island used future cigarettes proceeds to pay down its debt. Sasse sees that as a smart move. But the second time, the state used the future payments to help balance the budget, which Sasse says did nothing to help Rhode Island with its long-term problem of not having enough revenue to pay for all the services the state provides. Its the latter scenario that Sasse sees states turning to cigarettes bonds for, using them as a bridge to get by until revenues bounce back. Hope burns eternal, he says, but with the uncertain economy and market thats a hard bet to make.In Minnesota, the budget deal will buy some time. But Wall Street doesnt seem impressed. Already, one credit rating agency, Fitch Ratings, has downgraded the rating on approximately $5.7 billion in Minnesota general obligation bonds to &amp;#39;AA+&amp;#39; from &amp;#39;AAA,&amp;#39; citing the states reliance on one-time fixes. Other agencies may follow suit. That would mean the state could have to pay more to borrow.For anti-smoking cigarettes activists, Minnesotas decision to use cigarettes money to balance the budget is troubling for another reason. The state should be spending that money from the settlement for which it was intended: to help people stop smoking cigarettes or to make sure they dont start, says Dan Cronin of the Campaign for cigarettes-Free Kids in Washington, D.C., which monitors the settlement. The campaigns latest report shows that states have cut funding for cigarettes prevention and cessation programs to the lowest level since 1999. In the fiscal year that just ended, the group estimates that states collected $25 billion in revenue from the cigarettes settlement and cigarettes taxes, but only spent 2 percent of those funds ($518 million) on programs to prevent kids from smoking cigarettes and help smokers quit. Were not a fan of cigarettes bonding, Cronin says.States that have borrowed from cigarettes funds    Alabama    Alaska    Arkansas    California    Illinois    Iowa    Louisiana    Michigan    Minnesota    Ohio    North Dakota    New Jersey    New York    Rhode Island    Virginia    South Carolina    South Dakota    Washington    West Virginia 
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/cigarettes_bonds_to_rescue_minnesota.html</link>
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          <title>Northampton County Settles Cigarettes-Related Prison Beating Lawsuit</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-29 15:21:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Northampton County has settled a lawsuit by a former prison inmate who claims he was assaulted by cigarettes-dealing inmates with the help of a prison guard, federal court records say.The county will pay Aristotle Tarboro $105,000 to end the litigation, according to a copy of the settlement. Neither the county nor the prison officials named in the suit admit any wrongdoing by settling the case, records say.The settlement was reached Monday as both sides prepared for trial slated for Aug. 1, records say.Tarboros attorney, William Riback, did not wish to comment on the settlement. Attorneys for the county did not immediately respond to e-mail seeking comment.County Executive John Stoffa said Tarboro had been asking for a sizable amount of money in the lawsuit.    I never like to see settlements that cost the taxpayers money, Stoffa said. Weve basically cut our losses in this situation.Stoffa said the county will pay $25,000 and the rest will be covered by insurance. Stoffa said the prison guards involved in this case no longer work for the prison.Tarboro filed the suit last year, which details two separate attacks on him. During one of the attacks a guard, identified as James Boehm, electronically opened Tarboros cell to let in other prisoners, who assaulted Tarboro, records say.The assault stems from a cigarettes-dealing incident, records say. Tarboro saw two inmates dealing discount cigarettes in his cell and asked them to leave, which they did, but then they later returned, records say.Boehm, who was initially identified as Jim Bean, allegedly opened the cell to the inmates and a fight ensued.Tarboro said he was left bleeding in the cell for an hour and a half, and he lost two teeth, received six stitches, permanent scarring and recurring headaches.Tarboro claims Boehm threatened to take away Tarboros parole if he reported the fight, then Boehm and the attackers offered Tarboro a pouch of cigarettes, according to the suit.Another inmate, John J. Mucha, filed a lawsuit similar to Tarboros, but that one is still pending, records say. Muchas suit claims Boehm was helping inmates who ran a cigarettes gang. Boehm was suspended for his involvement in illicit and organized cheap cigarettes distribution in the prison, according to the lawsuit.Boehm resigned as a guard in February 2009, Stoffa previously said.
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/northampton_county_settles_cigarettes_related_prison_beating_lawsuit.html</link>
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          <title>Business Buffer Shot Down As South Portland Enacts Smoking Ban</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-28 15:19:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The South Portland City Council has adopted a smoking cigarettes ban, deemed by at least one citizen to be the most idiotic thing ever passed.You people that drove here tonight inside your cars put more pollution in my air than if I smoked 200 cartons of cigarettes, Ray Lee told the council. And thats a scientifically proven fact.However, others came with competing facts, including Ashley Bracy, of the state program Healthy Maine Partnerships, who presented a letter from Tina Pettingill, executive director of the Maine Public Health Association. It called secondhand smoke cigarettes a toxin more deadly that arsenic, asbestos or lead.Conclusions from researchers include that smokers need to be at least 20 feet away from non-smokers in order [for the non-smoker] to avoid concentrations of secondhand smoke, wrote Pettingill.Establishing a buffer zone was the only real debate among council members. They were unanimous in the basic concept - to ban cheap cigarettes products (including chewing cigarettes), from all parks, beaches and outdoor recreation facility owned and/or maintained by the city.They had decided that June 20, when adding the world all - over the objection of City Manager James Gailey - to a draft presented to them by the high schools Interact club.The club got hip to fact that the citys existing resolution against smoking cigarettes on public parks and beaches, passed in 2005, was going largely ignored, when Healthy Maine Partnerships visited a meeting of their group. Working with Mayor Rosemarie De Angelis, they gathered data on the need for a real ordinance, including a jar of 1,011 cigarette butts collected during a one-hour excursion to Willard Beach in April.Led by Elisa Martin and twins Conor and Jackson Beck, the students made an impact, but Gailey intimated that superceding his list of 21 outdoor areas with all was maybe taking things too far.All, he pointed out, would include the city golf course on Wescott Street. He speculated that smokers might take their memberships, and their money, to Portlands Riverside course, or other places where they could still smoke cigarettes on the greens.The bottom line is, either we believe in this, or we dont, said Councilor Alan Livingston.If we agree to exclude one recreational facility, that doesnt seem to make a lot of sense, agreed De Angelis.There is a price to do things right, said Councilor Tom Blake.However, prior to final passage on July 6, Blake made a motion to eliminate a 25-foot buffer zone around the citys outdoor spaces.Blake supported the ban itself 100 percent, he said, noting, We are not taking peoples rights away, we are only protecting the majority of our citizens on city-owned property.However, he noted that, in many places, private property lies within the proposed 25-foot buffer zone.I dont think we have a right to regulate what somebody does on their own personal property, if thats legal, he said.Councilor Tom Coward agreed, pointing out that, On the Greenbelt, 25 feet in some places puts you right in somebodys living room, which is an absurdity, frankly.However, Coward was not keen on cutting the buffer entirely. Instead, he suggested only exempting privately-owned residential property.Blakes motion failed 3-3, while Cowards passed 6-0.Blake then made a run at allowing people to smoke cigarettes on commercial property within the 25-foot safety zone.We cant differentiate who has rights and who does not, he said. This treats businesses differently than homeowners.But the majority of Blakes peers would have none of it, killing his second amendment 4-2.Being a commercial entity means the public is invited, said Coucilor Patti Smith. People shouldnt have to run the gauntlet to get into the paint store.Im a strong, principled person, said Smith. I just feel that smoking cigarettes, in whatever form you choose, is not healthy. Its hard for me to vote for anything that isnt healthy for people.In its final form, cigarettes use ordinance passed 6-0. It goes into effect Wednesday, July 26.In addition to Lee, one other person spoke out against the ordinance. Roberta Bobbi Lilley said, Our rights are being ignored or circumvented and we are being told its good for our health.Hopefully, all of these bans, from the states to the citys, will get before the Supreme Court, she said. This is a personal freedom. This is something thats been going on for centuries, and people have been living into their 100s.In the three tries it took to decide on a buffer zone, the council never stipulated if anyone can use buy cigarettes on private property there, or if only the owner gets a pass. Nor did they define whether an apartment building qualifies as residential, or if its considered commercial property.Smoking already was banned on state parks and beaches, as well as within 20 feet of municipal building entryways in South Portland and on athletic fields within 30 minutes of use.The new ordinance carries a fine of $100 for the first public use of smoking cigarettes or chewing cigarettes, $250 for the second offence and $500 for each subsequent violation.However, one passage reads, Nothing in this ordinance shall prevent the enforcement agent from obtaining voluntary compliance by way of warning, notice or education.
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/business_buffer_shot_down_as_south_portland_enacts_smoking_ban.html</link>
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          <title>Gilroy Dead Last In County Cigarettes Study</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-27 15:16:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Gilroy and Morgan Hill finished dead last in a countywide study released Wednesday detailing cities efforts to curtail cheap cigarettes use.The yearlong Communitys Health on online cigarettes Report Card - conducted by the Santa Clara County Public Health Department - graded each city in four categories: amount of cigarettes advertising, youth access to cigarettes, discount cigarette online sales and display and an extra-credit category for cities with additional enforcement or education.Gilroy, 50, and Morgan Hill, 40, were the only cities to receive failing grades on a 100-point scale.Mountain View and Saratoga - both scored 95 - were the tops in the county.The study is one of several efforts the countys public health department employs as part of a roughly $400,000 annual contract with the California cigarettes online Control Program, which is renegotiated every three years, said Amy Cornell, information officer for the county health department.Data were compiled from observing and recording storefront advertising and displays, law enforcement review and local municipal codes. Cities received higher scores for storefronts with cigarettes-related advertising covering less than one quarter to one third of total window coverage, according to the study.A 10 percent random sample of buy cigarettes retailers from San Jose and 20 percent random sample from each other city and unincorporated jurisdiction were visited.We select a random sample at the beginning of a project year and then use those retailers for our baseline for the survey for the three-year grant project period, Cornell said.Law enforcement agencies that attempted undercover, underage buy cigarette online purchases also netted higher marks, as did community outreach and education efforts such as the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program, commonly referred to as D.A.R.E.City, health and police officials who advocated for stronger cheap cigarette online control policies also bumped up overall scores, according to the study.Los Altos Hills and Monte Sereno were not included in the study because they have no cigarettes retailers within their jurisdictions, Cornell said.
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          <title>Cigarettes Tax Cut Is Misleading</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-26 15:06:00</pubDate> 
          <description>In the play by Tennessee Williams, A Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, there is a scene where the character, Harvey Big Daddy Pollitt, annoyed with the lies surrounding him, uttered these words: There aint nothin more powerful than the odor of mendacity! With all the demagoging I have read in the papers concerning the reduction of 10 cents a pack in the cigarette tax, I must say I do smell something in the air that is not cigarette smoke cigarettes but indeed mendacity.Whenever I discuss this topic I always inoculate myself by saying I have never smoked and have no idea why anyone smokes. There is no question this is a bad habit that is not good for ones health. No one can refute those facts. The recommendation by the Ways and Means Committee (WMC) to lower the tax by 10 cents a pack was simply driven by the need to restore falling cigarette tax revenue. Being a state rep. on the WMC I had a front row seat to the discussion. Lets explore the facts:1. The cigarette tax increased 98 cents a pack from 80 cents in FY 2007 to $1.78 in FY 2010.2. The cigarette tax revenue did increase during that period to a point in which it now represents the fourth largest revenue stream behind the state-wide property tax, business profits tax (BFT), and the business enterprise tax (BET).3. In FY 2011 the actual cigarette tax revenue dropped $7.7 million from FY 2010 levels indicating that we hit the tipping point in which the increased tax resulted in reduced total revenue. That is correct. Revenues are down because the tax rate was increased too much.4. In the WMC we heard testimony from grocery stores, convenient store chains, and mom &amp; pop convenient stores from all along the Massachusetts, Maine, and Vermont border. They indicated a drop in cigarette sales because the price per pack differential between New Hampshire and the border state prices has been reduced (especially with Maine). This has resulted in border state customers not coming across the border to buy discount cigarette online as they once did. The problem is when these lost customers came across the border they bought many other products including gasoline (18 cents per gallon gasoline tax), lottery tickets (lottery revenue), alcohol (lost profit from our liquor stores that goes to the general fund), and other items increasing profit and the number of employees in jobs (impacting the BPT revenues and BET revenues respectively).5. In the WMC we heard testimony from an individual familiar with the cigarette distribution center in Contoocook that distributes cigarettes store in New England. He said cigarette sales were up everywhere in New England with the exception of New Hampshire. His message was the citizens in N.H. werent smoking cigarettes any less because of the increased taxes, but smokers from border states simply are not coming to N.H. to buy their cheap cigarettes as they once did. Instead they are buying cigarettes in their home states at record numbers, especially in Maine. This is strong evidence these tax increases have not reduced smoking cigarettes in N.H., but simply reduced cross-border sales.6. There was a study conducted by two economics professors at Southern New Hampshire University indicating the reduction in the cigarette tax would lead to $11.8 million increase in revenue. Since I know something about multivariate analysis I sat down with the two professors to confirm their math was correct. Their overriding conclusion was the calculus for N.H. is different than other states because of our strong border state sales.7. There were all the phone calls, emails, and letters from older citizens saying the cigarette tax increases in recent years were hurting them. I engaged many of these folks who indicated to me at their age they did not want to give up smoking cigarettes. I even tried to talk them into quitting. The bottom line is the cigarette tax is a very regressive tax hurting our elderly and the poorest among us.8. The WMC heard testimony from representatives from organizations such as American Heart Association and the American Cancer Society presenting all that is bad about smoking cigarettes. It is safe to say all on the WMC were already familiar with their arguments and facts. We are not the policy committee who normally would hear this type of testimony; our charge is to focus on the revenue ramifications of this tax. At one point, I suggested that their organizations file a bill at the national level to ban cigarette sales totally and told them I would support it. Then I paused and said the dirty little secret is that every state is addicted to the cigarette tax. The hypocrisy of the whole discussion is that those who want even higher taxes on online cigarettes for health reasons would not want to see the loss of all buy cigarettes revenue because of the social programs it funds.9. The House, Senate and governor in a bipartisan fashion repealed the 10 percent gambling tax this session. There are those who say gambling is an addiction and thus a health risk. So why was there no outcry against the repeal of the gambling tax by the same folks demagoging the cigarette tax reduction? From a WMC view, both the gambling tax and increases in the cigarette tax resulted in lost revenue to the state in FY 2010, through reduced lottery sales and gaming revenues, as well as, from lost cigarette sales to the border states. The same basic economic principal was in play, but resulted in selective outrage.I have already heard from store owners thanking the Legislature for this tax reduction just as I have heard similar thanks concerning the elimination of the gambling tax. These moves have been good for business which is good for keeping jobs within our state and an increased flow of revenue to the general and education funds. We on the WMC will keep a close eye on the impact of both these actions which were designed to help business and to increase state revenue.As for the children smoking cigarettes argument, my response is, Lets not confuse tax policy with good parenting. When my children were in high school, the cigarette tax was 37 cents a pack. Cigarettes were very cheap then, but my children never smoked. As parents, we taught our children well. Society must rely on parents to properly guide children and not defer to tax policy to magically do the job of protecting its children from any unhealthy practices.Patrick Abrami is a resident of Stratham and serves as District 13 state rep. for Exeter, Stratham, North Hampton.
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/cigarettes_tax_cut_is_misleading.html</link>
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          <title>Bill Wichmann Wins Ciccone Engle Cigarettes Trial</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-25 15:02:00</pubDate> 
          <description>In his first Engle cigarettes store trial, plaintiff attorney Bill Wichmann convinced a Ft. Lauderdale jury that George Ciccone died of lung cancer and COPD caused by his addiction to cigarettes online containing nicotine, and that R.J. Reynolds was liable for both compensatory and punitive damages because RJRs defective products and gross negligence were a legal cause of Mr. Ciccones death.However, Jones Day Engle veteran Kevin Boyce did not walk away empty-handed. The jury allocated most of the fault to the plaintiff, and the jurys $50K punitive damage award was among the lowest punitive damage awards in an Engle trial.In Phase 1 of the trial, the jury rejected RJRs statute of limitations argument that Mr. Ciccones peripheral vascular disease did not manifest itself in time for Mr. Ciccone to be a member of the Engle class.  In Phase 2, Mr. Wichmann told the jury that George Ciccone, who served this country in the Navy, raised five kids, worked up until a week before he died -- he never had a chance against the suits and the scientists from R.J. Reynolds -- the suits on Wall Street, the suits in the Empire State Building, and the scientists. He never stood a chance...Young George Ciccone had a target on his back. R.J. Reynolds, we will prove to you, targeted young men like George Ciccone, to get him addicted on their product, so they could sell more products, and make more money, even though they knew that that product, if used exactly the way it was intended to be used, would cause lung cancer and death.For R.J. Reynolds, Jones Days Kevin Boyce told the jury that misstatements about the risks of smoking cigarettes didnt make any different to Mr. Ciccone. The idea that he was waiting for word from Reynolds to quit is undercut by the fact that when that word was given...it made no difference to him. Theres no quit attempt in 1997...In 1998 she says hes not interested in stopping. In 1999, two years after Reynolds CEO said smoking cigarettes can cause lung cancer, and [his doctors told him he could] lose his legs, and he still didnt try to stop...This is what you have to consider to see if plaintiffs can connect the conduct that they have been complaining about in this case with the harm suffered by Mr. Ciccone.The jury found that RJR discount cigarette online were defective, and the RJRs conduct was grossly negligent. However, the jury allocated 70% of the fault to Mr. Ciccone, and only 30% to RJR.The jury awarded $196,222 in medical expenses, $1.08M in past general damages, $1.9M in future general damages, and $50K in punitive damages.
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/bill_wichmann_wins_ciccone_engle_cigarettes_trial.html</link>
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          <title>City Council To Discuss Cigarette Taxes</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-24 15:01:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The Greeley City Council today will hear a variety of issues involving budget cutting, energy savings and a proposal for a sales tax on discount cigarette online during its regular work session.The council does not vote at its work sessions but discusses the issues at hand, scheduling public hearings for its regular biweekly meetings.Work sessions are open to the public, but residents are usually asked to address the council at regular meetings.The council will meet at 6 p.m. in city council chambers, 919 7th St.» First on the agenda is a look at a project to commission a commemorative bronze sculpture in honor of Greeley water pioneer W.D. Farr. The $70,000 project is funded by the citys 1 percent for art funds taken from the citys water and sewer capital projects.»The council will hear a report by a citizens budget advisory committee recommending a variety of budget cuts to help move more money toward fixing Greeleys roads. Cuts will be examined throughout the citys services. The committee recommends outsourcing services where possible, such as janitorial and landscaping; outsourcing the historic preservation program to a nonprofit historical society; and potentially outsourcing management of Greeley museums.The committee also recommends staff reductions only through attrition and a review of all city fees for potential increases.»The council will hear a report from Public Works Director Joel Hemesath regarding the citys efforts to reduce its energy consumption, as well as finding ways to save on electricity in city buildings and street lights through either the use of wind or solar power.» The council will hear a report about a potential partnership of the city and Greeley-Evans School District 6 on bus sharing, which shows such a move would actually cost the city roughly $1.5 million a year while saving the school district $200,000.» The council will consider a proposal by the cheap cigarettes Free Coalition of Weld County to put a tax increase on the city ballot in November. The coalition has suggested a 75-cents-per-pack tax on all buy cigarettes sold in the city, as well as 20 percent of the cost on other cigarettes products, which would raise about $1.7 million a year. To get it on the ballot for November, the council would have to approve an ordinance by mid-August. In a preliminary look at the idea, the city attorney has found that if Greeley began such a tax, it would have to forfeit its state share-back. There are no other cities in the state that have their own tax on online cigarettes products, city documents report. 
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/city_council_to_discuss_cigarette_taxes.html</link>
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          <title>Newest Cigar Aficionados Are 20-somethings</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-23 15:00:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Ann Stern sits at a table outside Vino 100 and the Tinder Box Cigar Bar in Rapid City laughing with friends, drinking an adult beverage and smoking cigarettes a large cigar.Its my go-to treat, the 26-year-old said.The Petit Corona imparts notes of honey and cream when smoked.Stern, who is originally from Sioux Falls but is working in Rapid City for the summer, said she has been smoking cigarettes the cigars for about four years.Cigars, often thought of as a vice for middle-age businessmen, have found a new audience in 20-somethings.It kind of seems like a fad, but they keep coming back over and over, said Johnny Osborne, a cigarettesnist at the Tinder Box in downtown Rapid City.Osborne, who has never been a cigarette smoker, said he began smoking cigarettes cigars in his late 20s.My grandfather turned me on to pipe smoking cigarettes, and then I began to appreciate cigars, he said.Osborne is even taking online classes to become a certified cigarettesnist.The Rapid City Tinder Box, at 520 Seventh St. in the Buell Building, carries an extensive selection of handmade cigars and a variety of flavored cigars ranging from honey, rum and vanilla to caramel macchiato.On a recent night, Derek Wilson of Rapid City chose a $13 Rocky Patel, vintage 99, premium cigar at the Tinder Box. As he stepped to the counter to pay for the treat, Osborne asked for his ID.Wilson, 23, said he has been smoking cigarettes cigars for about five years.I like cigars easy taste and flavor, he said.Store co-owner David Orris, who admits to smoking cigarettes cheap cigarettes in the 1960s, sees a whole other culture in cigar smokers.You can smoke cigarettes a cigarette in five or six minutes, where a cigar can take from 20 minutes to two hours, he said.Orris said what draws people to cigar smoking cigarettes is the aroma and relaxing qualities.Some people wont do it unless they have allocated a certain amount of time. Then, they combine it with a good book and a glass of scotch, he said.Like fine wine, cigarettes for cigars is aged about three years. buy cigarettes leaves are harvested and aged using a process that combines use of heat and shade to reduce sugar and water content without causing the large leaves to rot. It is cured, then fermented to help the leaf die slowly without rotting or disintegrating. This is where the flavor, burning and aroma characteristics are primarily brought out in the leaf.But they dont stay bundled for the entire time.Its almost like composting, said Orris. It can heat up to 180 degrees in the center of the bundle.For that reason, the bale is unpacked and repacked as it continues to age.After the leaves have aged properly, they are sorted for use as filler or wrapper based upon their appearance and overall quality.At the Tinder Box in Rapid City, the humidor, which measures about 10 feet by 12 feet, accommodates 300 varieties of cigars. Some are infused with flavors such as rum, stout beer and Makers Mark bourbon. Cigars can cost from a couple dollars to more than $50 each.What are Orris favorites? He has two: the Rocky Patel Edge Maduro series, noted for its bold flavor and lots of spice, and the Nicaragua Antano 1970 series, with its spicy and sweet flavors.The flavors of cigars can range from spicy to creamy, Orris said.What one person finds bland and uninteresting, another might thoroughly enjoy, he said.He likened it to varying tastes for beer.One day I might want a stout and another day a Pilsner, Orris said.Just as tastes vary, so do those buying and smoking cigarettes the cigars.Ive had a couple kids come in who are just turning 18 who wanted to smoke cigarettes a cigar, so I suggested something mild. Most of those have returned to try others, Orris said. We get all kinds of business people, from construction workers to attorneys.
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/newest_cigar_aficionados_are_20_somethings.html</link>
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          <title>Local GOP Lawmakers Rake In Cigarettes Cash</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-22 11:34:00</pubDate> 
          <description>San Diego County Republican lawmakers reaped a trove of campaign contributions from the cigarettes industry during the last election cycle, according to a study released Tuesday by the American Lung Association in California.As the then-Assembly GOP leader, Martin Garrick of Solana Beach took in the second-most contributions among all lawmakers — $15,600 — in 2009-10, according to the report, which has a searchable database.All told, the cigarettes for sale industry gave $71,000 to sitting Republican lawmakers representing all or parts of San Diego County over that period. Not a single local Democratic incumbent received a direct contribution, the study states.Cigarette makers and distributors contributed $6.5 million to California state candidates in 2009-10, a $4.5 million increase over the 2007-2008 election cycle, according to the associations numbers.In 2009-10, one out every two lawmakers were given various amounts of money. The industry also spent $2.76 million on lobbying, much of it dedicated to defeating new cheap cigarette online taxes, the lung association reported.Over a longer period, 2003-10, Mark Wyland, R-Solana Beach, took in the most cheap cigarettes money among current local lawmakers, $47,743. He is the longest serving local Republican in the Legislature, once an assemblyman now a senator.The reason we have to go to the voters is because the buy cigarette online industry kills any cigarettes online tax bills in the Legislature because it has so much influence, said Debra Kelley, the San Diego-based senior director of advocacy for the lung association.The report was issued as the lung association and other anti-smoking cigarettes forces prepare for another election battle, this one over a $1 per pack tax on discount cigarettes to finance cancer research.The measure will be on the next general election ballot, which could be in either February or June depending on when the Legislature settles on a date for the presidential primary.This study, she said, offers Californians a look at the role buy cigarettes money plays in state politics.The industry has used its influence to bottle up a major bill in a committee friendly to the industry, she said. The Assembly Governmental Organization Committee is holding the measure, Senate Bill 575, that tightens current no-smoking cigarettes laws in the workplace, including extending the no-smoking cigarettes rule to owner-operated establishments. Chairman Isadore Hall, D-Compton, received $7,800 from the industry in the last election cycle.Its not just lawmakers on the receiving end. The industry spent $3.35 million to pass business friendly initiatives on the November ballot, including one that will force local communities to take proposals to raise taxes and fees on cigarettes products and stores to a public vote.It also contributed $716,000 to the California Republican Party and nearly $400,000 to a political action committee controlled by the California Chamber of Commerce from Jan. 1, 2009 through Dec. 31, 2010, according to the report.A spokesman for cigarettes giant Altria, parent of Phillip Morris USA, which markets Marlboro, Parliament and Virginia Slims, declined to comment. RJ Reynolds, makers of Camel, Kool, and Winston, could not be reached for comment.With the Legislature on summer recess, Garrick and several local lawmakers, could not be reached for comment.While local Democrats currently in office did not receive cigarettes money, two former lawmakers did. Denise Ducheny, who was a senator and assemblywoman from San Diego, received $12,000. Steve Peace, a former assemblyman and senator also from San Diego, received $3,000.That pales compared with contributions to now-departed Republicans. Then-Assemblyman George Plescia of San Diego received $56,487 and former Sen. Dennis Hollingsworth of Temecula brought in $33,436.
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/local_gop_lawmakers_rake_in_cigarettes_cash.html</link>
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          <title>Big Money From Big Cigarettes</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-21 11:32:00</pubDate> 
          <description>GOP Assemblyman and San Diego mayoral candidate Nathan Fletcher has received a total of $25,100 in campaign contributions from the cigarettes industry, according to a database of state legislators released today by the Center for discount cigarette online Policy &amp; Organizing, run by the American Lung Association of California.In an accompanying report, the center said during the two-year state election cycle from January 1, 2009 through December 31, 2010, cigarettes interests spent $9.3 million to influence elections and legislative policy and have spent nearly $100 million on campaign contributions and lobbying in the past decade (2001-2010).According to the centers data, during 2007-2008, Fletcher raised $13,400 from cigarettes store interests, including $7,200 from Phillip Morris parent Altria Group and $4,600 from RJ Reynolds. During 2009-2010, Fletcher raised a total of $11,700, $7,800 from Altria and $3,900 from RJ Reynolds.Fletchers fellow GOP Assemblyman Martin Garrick, recently detained for DUI, received $15,600 during the most recent cycle. Assemblyman Joel Anderson got $8,400, and Sen. Mark Wyland took in $5,800.Local legislative Democrats reportedly received no online cigarettes money, according to the database, but the centers numbers do not include so-called independent expenditures, contributions to campaigns supposedly staged without a candidates knowledge or direction.Sen. Juan Vargas, now vying to replace Democratic mayoral candidate Bob Filner in Congress, was the notable beneficiary of a massive independent expenditure by Put California Back to Work, sponsored by the Civil Justice Association of California, a big business lobbying group of which Altria is a member.
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&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Cigarettes &amp;amp; Tobacco News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Cheap Cigarettes &amp;amp; Tobacco News
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/big_money_from_big_cigarettes.html</link>
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          <title>Cigarettes Money Sways California Politics</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-20 11:31:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The cigarettes online industry spent $9.3 million over the past two years to fight cigarette taxes, support candidates and influence politics in California, an anti-smoking cigarettes group said in a report issued Tuesday.The report by the American Lung Association in California said political spending by cigarettes for sale interests over the past decade totaled almost $100 million, with cigarette maker Philip Morris USA Inc. accounting for more than half the total.Altria Group Inc., corporate parent of Philip Morris, declined to comment.The report is the latest by the association documenting political spending by the discount cigarette online industry, which spikes when cigarette taxes or cheap cigarette online regulations are in play at the Capitol or at the ballot box.Researchers found that online cigarettes companies and distributors contributed more than $6.5 million to political committees and candidates for the Legislature and statewide office in 2009 and 2010. Most of that went to two tax-related ballot initiatives.Another $2.7 million went for lobbying on legislation.Big buy cigarette online continues to use its vast financial resources for campaign contributions and lobbying expenditures to oppose bills and ballot initiatives that would benefit public health by reducing cheap cigarettes use, said Jane Warner, president and chief executive of the state lung association, in a prepared statement.The group says smoking cigarettes rates continue to drop in California, which contributes to better health and lower medical expenses, but the cigarettes store industry spends heavily to fight efforts that could cut smoking cigarettes even more.It doesnt always work, though.About 60 percent of all industry contributions during the two-year period—$3.85 million, all from Philip Morris—went to political committees that were trying to influence the results of two 2010 ballot measures. The cigarettes company gave money to oppose Proposition 25, which changed the vote needed to pass a state budget from two-thirds to a simple majority; and to support Proposition 26, which classified many fees as taxes so that a two-thirds majority vote is needed to change them.Voters approved both measures.About half of all legislators received contributions from one of three cigarettes companies or a group that represents cigarettes distributors in California, with 21 of them accepting at least $10,000. Both major party candidates for governor in 2010 also received contributions, with $2,500 for Democrat Jerry Brown and $25,900 for Republican Meg Whitman.Spending on campaigns during 2009-2010 was dwarfed by the 2005-2006 election cycle, when cigarettes interests spent $66.6 million, largely to defeat Proposition 86, a 2006 ballot measure that would have boosted the California cigarettes tax by $2.60 a pack.Another ballot measure in 2012 may also draw cigarettes spending. A proposal to raise the cigarettes tax by $1 a pack to finance smoking cigarettes prevention efforts and research on cancer and other smoking cigarettes-linked illnesses will go to the voters in February or June.
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/cigarettes_money_sways_california_politics.html</link>
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          <title>Citys Cigarette Fee Holds Up In Court</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-19 11:29:00</pubDate> 
          <description>San Francisco has withstood a legal challenge brought by cigarette maker Philip Morris USA and others to the citys 20-cent per pack fee on cigarettes.San Francisco Superior Court Judge Ronald E. Quidachay ruled that the citys fee to recoup the cost of cleaning up cigarette butts was just that and not a cigarette tax in disguise.Philip Morris and some local retailers contend the fee, the brainchild of former Mayor Gavin Newsom, violates state law because voters didnt approve it. The city maintains that because its a fee, rather than a tax, voter approval isnt required.The city estimates that 22 percent of the litter on streets in sidewalks is from cigarettes. Philip Morris had argued the fee was not reasonably related to the citys actual cleanup costs.Quidachay disagreed in an 8-page ruling issued Monday, saying the undisputed material facts before this court show that the citys Cigarette Litter Abatement Fee is a valid fee.Its unclear if Philip Morris will appeal. An attorney for the company could not be reached late Tuesday.
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/city_s_cigarette_fee_holds_up_in_court.html</link>
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          <title>Smoke Free Debate Continues In Horry County</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-18 11:56:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Smoke Free Horry hosted a kid-focused event in Myrtle Beach Friday as a way to continue educating people about the dangers of smoking cigarettes. The event also served as evidence that the organization continues to grow its efforts to reduce cigarettes store use in the county.While many people may think the organization is focused on getting cities or the county to pass smoke-free ordinances, the main goal is really to teach people about the dangers of smoking cigarettes and second-hand smoke. The organization also work to keep people from smoking cigarettes or to help them stop.If the education and raised awareness prompts people to ask for public smoking cigarettes bans, Ty Grissett with Smoke Free Horry say that is even better.The governments are elected to be able to do the will of the people, Grissett said. Were primarily here to educate people about the dangers of smoking cigarettes and second-hand smoke. If those politicians or elected officials as for additional information as to the effects of smoking cigarettes and second hand smoke, we would be more than happy to provide them with that information.Since 2008, Surfside Beach had been the only Horry County government with public smoking cigarettes restrictions. Earlier this year Atlantic Beach also approved to ban smoking cigarettes in workplaces and public spaces including the beach.However, in Myrtle Beach Mayor John Rhodes said while the city has eliminated smoking cigarettes on its own property council is not ready to expand the restrictions to other workplaces and businesses. County council has taken a similar stance, but now a citizens group inspired by Smoke Free Horry is pushing for change.Wed love to see Horry County and all of the municipalities in the area pass smoking cigarettes ordinances and go smoke cigarettes free because its what we feel like a majority of the public wants, said Bill Crowther with the Healthy Horry Coalition.He said it just makes sense to bring the Grand Strand up to date with other areas where tourists come from.Theyre shocked when they come in and they can go to a restaurant and people are smoking cigarettes there, he said. Theyre not used to that.Crowther said he was living in Clemson when that town approved a public smoking cigarettes restriction. He said some businesses opposed it, but they later found that there were no drawbacks.Others have said a ban on smoking cigarettes in all workplaces, including restaurants and bars, can best be justified as a way to protect the health of workers. While customers can chose whether or not to be in a smoky environment, employees do not have as much control over their surroundings.That argument is also part of Smoke Free Horrys campaign to the public.The goal is to first off educate the public about the dangers of smoking cigarettes and second-hand smoke, and one of our other goals is also to encourage more businesses to consider smoke-free policies for their workers, Grissett said.
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/smoke_free_debate_continues_in_horry_county.html</link>
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          <title>Spearfish Schools Ban E-cigarettes</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-17 11:55:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The Spearfish School District has banned e-cigarettes, along with other objects or systems that dispenses nicotine.As the popularity of the devices has grown among smokers trying to quit, and even at Deadwood casinos, school officials saw the need to make the change.We werent sure we were covered in the policy that we had previously and we felt that we should be, said Superintendent Dave Peters.The policies amended, Policy 1315 and Policy 5105 now direct the school administration to treat the use, possession or promotion of all forms of nicotine-containing products or nicotine delivery devices, which may or may not include actual cigarettes, as a violation of this policy, provided the device is not part of an individuals cessation program.Although Peters said he was unaware of anyone using an e-cigarette on school grounds, he said the district is trying to keep its policies current with the ever-changing technology that may not be covered by its rules.Its a moving target, he said.He said he thought most people would know that the use of the devices on school is inappropriate.Dr. Randal Royer, the board president and a professor at Black Hills State University, said he has seen people use the devices in inappropriate places.We had a student smoke cigarettes one of those during a final exam at the end of the semester.When the student was told that there was a no smoking cigarettes policy in the buildings, Royer said the student said, Its just vapor.Its a grey area right now, and if we dont have (the policy) we cant do anything about it, he said at a previous meeting.The amended policy is in line with the policies set forth by the Associated School Boards.
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/spearfish_schools_ban_e_cigarettes.html</link>
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          <title>Deadline For Smoking Ban Comments Near</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-16 11:43:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Sunday is the final day public comment is being sought on a proposal to expand the smoking cigarettes ban in Ohio County.As of Friday afternoon, a total of 26 letters and emails had been submitted to the Wheeling-Ohio County Health Department. Administrator Howard Gamble estimated a majority of those submissions were comments in favor of expanding the ban.During its noon Tuesday meeting, the board of health is expected to read over the comments and decide when to hold a public hearing on the matter.At that point, they can do anything they want. They can pick it apart or leave it as is, Gamble said. A majority (of letters) were in favor. A few did not want any changes.The current measure bans smoking cigarettes in public indoor areas except for video gambling areas in bars, at Wheeling Island Hotel-Casino-Racetracks video gambling area and at stand-alone video gambling parlors.Proposed changes would ban smoking cigarettes in all indoor public areas, on government-owned property and within 20 feet of doorways of all public and government buildings.
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/deadline_for_smoking_ban_comments_near.html</link>
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          <title>Local Keep America Beautiful Adopts Cigarette Litter Prevention Program</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-15 15:43:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The board of directors of Keep America Beautiful-Topeka/Shawnee County is proud to announce that it has adopted the national Cigarette Litter Prevention Program for local use.Keep America Beautifuls Cigarette Litter Prevention Program was developed after identifying cigarette litter as the most littered items found in cleanups across the country. Best practices in America and abroad were studied, field-testing was conducted in thirteen communities around the country and results confirmed the program will be a success in any size community.Since 1977, Keep America Beautiful-Topeka/Shawnee County has enjoyed the ongoing support of the City of Topeka and Shawnee County as well as its residents.This year, in addition to installing cigarette butt receptacles in downtown, we are kicking off our new campaign, The Butt Stops Here addressing cigarette litter at bus stops. Eight bus stop locations will receive a cigarette butt receptacle. A group of citizens have agreed to empty and monitor the bus stops in our Adopt a Butt Stop program.Philicia McKee, executive director of Keep America Beautiful-Topeka/Shawnee County, said I am thrilled to continue our fight against cigarette litter in our own community. The Topeka and Shawnee County Cigarette Litter Prevention Program will support our community improvement efforts and help prevent litter at our bus stops and in our downtown area.The Topeka and Shawnee County Cigarette Litter Prevention Program will launch on Thursday, July 21st at 11:00 a.m. at 820 SE Quincy. Volunteers and local businesses will be distributing FREE pocket ashtrays and FREE butt buckets (a receptacle for vehicles) to adult smokers.This program is sponsored by Keep America Beautiful-Topeka/Shawnee County, Topeka Metro, The City of Topeka, Shawnee County, Downtown Topeka, Inc., United Way of Greater Topeka, and Philip Morris.
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/local_keep_america_beautiful_adopts_cigarette_litter_prevention_program.html</link>
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          <title>Fultondale Passes Strongest Smoking Law</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-14 15:41:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The Fultondale City Council passed a new smoking cigarettes ordinance for the city at its regular meeting on Monday, and anti-smoking cigarettes advocates say it is the strongest of any ordinance in the county.The ordinance prohibits smoking cigarettes in public places, all workplaces and providing penalties for the violation thereof. Some of the reasons for the law, outlined in the ordinance itself, are reduction in indoor air pollution and decreasing secondhand smoke.The ordinance, which goes into effect Sept. 1, prohibits smoking cigarettes in almost any enclosed area where the general public can gather (except for private residences that dont double as care facilities), even if its private property. Smoking is even banned in public areas in multiple-unit residences like apartment buildings and trailer parks, and in enclosed residential facilities such as nursing home rooms and motel and hotel rooms rented to guests.The law also specifically forbids smoking cigarettes in private clubs. The American Legion building falls under that category. Bill Steber, commander of the American Legion in Fultondale, said membership for the organization is exclusive to people over 21 years of age. He asked to council to consider that it was a private organization, and to make an exception in the law for it.Lowery said the ordinance has been delayed for some time because he was anticipating a state law that never came. A bill that would have banned smoking cigarettes in all public places across the state never got past the state House Health Committee during the last legislative session.Owners of property can now declare the entire establishment a non-smoking cigarettes place, which supersedes the ordinances existing restrictions.Other people besides Steber spoke against the law at the meeting, as well.Owners and operators of public places or places of employment (including vehicles, such as food trucks) that fall under the smoking cigarettes ban must post obvious no smoking cigarettes signs and remove ashtrays.To enforce the law, business owners, employees, or any kind of authority figure related to the venue at which a smoking cigarettes violation is taking place is required to ask the smoker to extinguish whatever product he or she is smoking cigarettes. If the smoker doesnt comply, then service must be refused and he or she must immediately be asked to leave the premises. If the smoker still wont comply with the ordinance, then law enforcement must be contacted.The general public will be fined no more than $50 for an infraction of the ordinance. Any person who owns, manages, operates or otherwise controls a public place or place of employment who breaks the law will be fined no more than $100 for the first infraction, $200 for the second within a year, and $500 for each additional infraction within a year. Violations can also result in suspension or revocation of business licenses.
Other cigarettes news and tobacco market events you can find at links bellow:
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Cigarettes Online News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Online Cigarettes Tobacco News
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          <link>http://www.discountcigarettesmall.com/cigarettes-news/fultondale_passes_strongest_smoking_law.html</link>
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