Governor promises quick signature on smoking ban

Governor promises quick signature on smoking ban

Bob Brown/Times-Dispatch

Smoking bill sponsors Sen. Ralph S. Northam, D-Norfolk, (left) and Del. John A. Cosgrove, R-Chesapeake. listen to Gov. Timothy M. Kaine yesterday.

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Virginia, which 400 years ago helped found a nation on the leafy cash crop of tobacco, yesterday took a significant step toward smoke-free restaurants and bars.

Lawmakers passed and sent to Gov. Timothy M. Kaine a measure that restricts smoking in restaurants to ones with rooms that are ventilated separately and to private clubs.

Kaine, who in 2006 had issued an executive order banning smoking in state government buildings, said he will sign the legislation.

"I think it will be signed quite swiftly -- in the quickest-drying ink I can find," Kaine said outside his office.

The Democratic-controlled state Senate voted 27-13 to pass Senate Bill 1105. The tally in the Republican-controlled House of Delegates was 60-39.

An identical piece of legislation, House Bill 1703, cleared a Senate committee yesterday and also is on track for approval.

Kaine lauded the legislature's bipartisan support for the bills, and the measures' sponsors -- Sen. Ralph S. Northam, D-Norfolk, and Del. John A. Cosgrove, R-Chesapeake.

"It's a very significant accomplishment."

Twenty-three other states and Puerto Rico have passed bans on smoking indoors at bars and restaurants.

"Historically it is a step, but one in which Virginia is in accord with a lot of other states," Kaine said. "We're never going to solve the nation's health-care challenges if we don't start off tackling the nation's health challenges."

Information released by Kaine's office suggested that Virginia's new ban would be the toughest among the nation's top five tobacco-producing states, which also include North Carolina, Kentucky, South Carolina and Tennessee. Among them, only Tennessee has a statewide ban, which exempts private clubs and any establishments that require proof of age to enter.

Over the years, legislative attempts to extinguish smoking in public have had little success in Virginia, headquarters of Philip Morris USA, the Henrico County-based tobacco giant.

"Every restaurant in Virginia already had the right to ban smoking on their own" and many did, said Bill Phelps, a Philip Morris USA spokesman.

Hilton Oliver of the Virginia Group to Alleviate Smoking in Public, or Virginia GASP, called it "a pretty good bill under the circumstances."

Speaker of the House William J. Howell, R-Stafford, had worked out the bill's details with Kaine.

Yesterday the House of Delegates passed the bill without debate. Thirty-two of the 53 Republicans, including House Majority Leader H. Morgan Griffith, R-Salem, defied Howell and voted against the measure.

The legislation is "something whose time has come," Cosgrove said. "I voted against it last year. Even hard-core Republicans back home were telling me, 'We like what you're doing in Richmond, but you need to pass a smoking bill.'"

Del. Terry G. Kilgore, R-Scott, who had offered amendments to try to weaken the bill, said the public sentiment favors a smoking ban.

"One thing I have learned in politics is, don't get in front of a train," Kilgore said.

This year -- with all 100 members of the House up for re-election -- Howell sent signals that the Republican leadership might be willing to forge a compromise on the issue.

Howell met with Kaine, and along with Del. S. Chris Jones, R-Suffolk, and Northam and Cosgrove, began work on a compromise.

Dissident Republicans, led by Kilgore, attempted to filter the bill with amendments that would have allowed smoking when minors are not present and in areas separated by a door and without independent ventilation. But further negotiation convinced House leaders there was enough GOP support for the measure.

The governor has struggled with opposition in the House and with a deep national recession that has forced cuts to the state budget and tamped down many of his initiatives.

Yesterday, Kaine ranked the smoking ban with previous legislative successes such as last year's higher-education bond package; the expansion of pre-kindergarten programs; and reforms to the mental-health system following the Virginia Tech shootings.

More restrictive smoking bills that cleared the Senate earlier this year were killed in the House. Asked whether the restaurant ban could be the beginning of an expansion of anti-smoking initiatives, Kaine said momentum is building.

"I don't know," he said. "That's going to be another legislature and another governor wrestling with that."



Contact Jim Nolan at (804) 649-6061 or .

Staff writer Tyler Whitley and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by fedup on February 20, 2009 at 9:00 am

Most Virginians will breath a little easier once this goes into effect. Why the delay? July 4 would be a perfect day for this to be law.

Large scale tobacco farming ruined the land and promoted the slave economy.

Flag Comment Posted by Shoreliner on February 20, 2009 at 8:58 am

AG, why are you thanking the lord? “The lord” had nothing to do with this, so don’t give “the lord” credit. Also, what exactly does “a measure that restricts smoking in restaurants to ones with rooms that are ventilated separately” mean? To me that statement is to vague and says nothing will change.

Flag Comment Posted by Circe on February 20, 2009 at 8:55 am

Finally! Thank you, Governor Kaine, for your hard work on getting this bill passed. Now I can go to a restaurant or have a couple of drinks at a bar without getting choked by cigarette smoke.

Flag Comment Posted by hunter on February 20, 2009 at 8:41 am

I can’t wait till next year’s General Assembly takes up the burning issue should be allow restaurant owners to decide whether they offer Coke or Pepsi? You know soft drinks are worst then second hand smoke they are the unseen killer that leads to obesity and all sorts of health problems.  Come on we can’t make any decisions on our own on which restaurant to frequent, please meembers of the General Assembly and yes the Governor tells us what to do. We are all lost children.

Flag Comment Posted by Happy Rhea on February 20, 2009 at 8:40 am

You know, it’s people like “Lazy Rebel 2” that make you realize how George Bush might look intelligent….to some people….

Flag Comment Posted by lazyrebel2 on February 20, 2009 at 8:32 am

Heil Kaine!  Where/ when do we get our brown shirts and swastika arm bans?
Hopefully the next gov can issue an execuitive order to halt this.

Flag Comment Posted by AG on February 20, 2009 at 7:48 am

Thank the Lord!  You have made me proud Virginia…

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