Restaurant smoking bill passes House committee

Restaurant smoking bill passes House committee

Bob Brown/Times-Dispatch

Gov. Timothy M. Kaine announced the legislation this morning with House Speaker William Howell.

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A bill to ban smoking in Virginia’s bars and restaurants cleared the House of Delegates General Laws Committee this evening by a 16-6 vote.
The bill will now go to the full House.
The committee action came on the same day that Republican House Speaker William J. Howell and Democratic Gov. Timothy M. Kaine reached agreement on the proposed legislation.

Flanked by a bipartisan group of lawmakers, Howell and Kaine discussed the legislation that would make exceptions for private clubs and restaurants with a designated smoking room that is physically separated and independently ventilated from non-smoking dining areas.

The bill would also exclude any permanent outdoor patio area of a restaurant, any portion of a restaurant used just for private functions and street-side mobile food stands.

 

Howell and Kaine cooperated to forge the agreement.

But legislators said the compromise did not include any guaranteed passage by the House, which has been hostile to anti-smoking bills. The bill will be carried by a Republican in the House and a Democrat in the Senate.

“The compromise strikes a fair balance between the rights of smokers who choose to enjoy a legal product and the rights of other individuals who want to enjoy a smoke-free environment when eating at a restaurant,“ Howell said this morning in a news conference.

Keenan Caldwell, director of government relations for the American Cancer Society of Virginia, said health groups had no role in crafting the proposed compromise. He said the groups were still reviewing the proposal.

“Our hope has always been something that protects the health of workers,“ Caldwell said. “At first glance, as you look at (the compromise), it doesn’t do that, and it is not really in the interest of public health, so that is a major concern of ours.“

But Sara Long, director of program services for the March of Dimes, said she was encouraged to see the state “taking baby steps to help the babies.“

David Sutton, a spokesman for cigarette maker Philip Morris USA, expressed skepticism.

“While this bill attempts to provide a compromse, we believe that some of the provisions go too far,“ he said. “It would impose significant costs in a very difficult economy on business owners that would like to accommodate smokers in their establishments.“

And some conservative grass-roots organizations were not happy with the deal.

Ben Marchi, with Americans for Prosperity, said about Howell, “The activists he will depend on this fall, many of whom are members of groups like ours, will not be pleased that he has caved to the advocates of big government, namely the governor.

“We feel it is unfortunate that the speaker has chosen to trust government to solve our problems rather than to trust consumers with the decision.“

If passed, the bill would make Virginia part of a growing list of states passing legislation to curb smoking in restaurants. Twenty-three other states, including Maryland, have passed bans on smoking indoors at bars and restaurants, as have the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico.

In Virginia, smoking was banned in all state buildings and vehicles under an executive order signed in 2006 by Kaine.

State legislators, in both chambers and on both sides of the aisle, proposed 14 smoking ban bills this year, according to Kaine’s office. In addition to that high interest, Howell said he thinks a compromise was forged this year because “both sides were willing to yield.“

The Senate backed total bans, including private clubs, Howell said, and the House was unwilling to adopt such a broad prohibition.

 

“You’re gonna tell a guy that fought at the Battle of the Bulge that he can’t have a cigarette with his coffee at the VFW club,“ Howell said. “You can’t do things like that.“

Under the legislation, violators would be subject to a fine of no more than $25.

The agreement follows the rejection earlier this week by legislators of a key component of Kaine’s budget-cutting plan involving tobacco—a 30 cent per pack hike in the tax on cigarettes. Kaine had hoped to raise $147 million with the tax, which he said would help prevent further cuts in Medicaid and offesty the $400 million or so it costs the state to treat smoking related illnesses under the program.

Second-hand smoke is responsible for an estimated 1,700 deaths per year, according to the Virginia Department of Health. In addition, the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids estimates the Commonwealth spends $113 million a year on health care expenditures related to exposure to second-hand smoke.

How the bill will fare on the floor of the full House is uncertain.

“I’m never confident down here,“ Howell said. “I’m surprised very day.“

—Olympia Meola, Jim Nolan and Tyler Whitley,

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by JackCrowX on February 05, 2009 at 11:13 am

Best bit of legislation this whole session. I’ll go out and celebrate all weekend if this passes.

Just to cut off any sillyness and “sky is falling” posts:
http://www.bismarcktribune.com/articles/2008/03/14/news/local/150988.txt -
Study finds that smoking ban had no effect on revenues
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=990DE2D91E30F93AA15750C0A9629C8B63&sec=health - Bars and Restaurants Thrive Amid Smoking Ban, Study Says

Flag Comment Posted by drhoagie on February 05, 2009 at 11:12 am

It’s what they do in all of those trendy Blue States.  You know, the bankrupt places where citizens are threatened with jail time if they do not recycle, if they light an outdoor fire pit, and pay thousands more in taxes for overburdening, freedom stomping regulations.
It’s what the DNC wants Tim Kaine to do to Virginia.
So we can be like Obama’s mob style Chicago.

Flag Comment Posted by qhgirl on February 05, 2009 at 11:05 am

While I love a smoke free environment, I am not excited that government is making it happen.  In a free market, smoke free establishments will be available because of demand for them. I just traveled this past weekend and found that several hotels and restaurants have gone to no smoking even without any legislative urging.  It was really nice to stay somewhere clean and fresh.  However, I would not expect the government to mandate that situation.  Restaurants and Bars are not places people are required to enter.  Even employees of these businesses could choose other occupations… there are certainly other occupations with equally hazardous conditions.  So, I will enjoy the benefit, but don’t support the method that caused the change.

Flag Comment Posted by edolphs on February 05, 2009 at 11:03 am

Finally!!!!  I am so excited.  Its wonderful that this finally passed.

Flag Comment Posted by wandapc on February 05, 2009 at 11:00 am

Way to go Kaine, another 500,000 jobs. You stood up at a union meeting when I was working at Philip Morris and swore you would support the tobacco co’s. We have rights too. You have workers in the plants, plants that make the paper, plants that make the packs, plants that make and blend the tobacco. Everything to do with a cigarette, its pack or its carton and the cases is another plant. There goes how many more jobs?

Flag Comment Posted by fedup on February 05, 2009 at 10:49 am

Good work. Ban smoking in restaurants and in public areas. Stiffen up a no smoking within fifty feet of public doorways rule, too.

Be warned: smokers are too drug addled to sensibly compromise. Steamroll over them when they are getting their five minute fix outdoors.

Flag Comment Posted by shortdraf on February 05, 2009 at 10:37 am

If this measure banning smoking in bars and restaurants now is for real it will be the best thing our lawmakers have done in a long time.

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