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Join in on this Discussion and see the pictures. Click here-> : Calif. declares secondhand smoke a pollutant


BATMAN
01-27-2006, 09:44 AM
California became the first state to declare secondhand smoke a toxic air pollutant Thursday, citing its link to breast cancer. Experts said the decision may have more impact worldwide than it does in the largely smoke-free state.

The decision by the California Air Resources Board puts environmental tobacco smoke in the same category as diesel exhaust, arsenic and benzene.

Scientific studies in recent years have warned about the health impact from second-hand smoke and linked it to a wide array of ailments including heart disease, lung cancer and other respiratory ailments, as well as breast cancer.

http://www.ocat.org/pdf/brantford/Littlegirlad_1.jpg

“I think there is no question that this puts California way ahead,” said John Froines, chairman of the Air Resources Board’s Scientific Review Panel.

“To actually have the major air pollution agency in the state of California to list ETS (environmental tobacco smoke) as a toxic air contaminant is going to have immense impact, we think, in terms of public education around other states,” he said. “It will clearly lead to regulatory changes within the state.”

The unanimous decision relied on a September report that found a sharply increased risk of breast cancer in young women exposed to secondhand smoke. It also links drifting smoke to premature births, asthma and heart disease, other cancers, and numerous health problems in children.

"If people are serious about breast cancer, they have to deal with secondhand smoke. That's what this is all about," said Dr. Stanton Glantz, director of the Center for Tobacco Control, Research and Education at the University of California, San Francisco. He reviewed the science behind Thursday's decision. "This is a seminal, international document. It's impossible to underestimate what a big deal this is."

Effects of passive smoke
The report by scientists at California's Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment draws on more than 1,000 other studies of the effects of passive smoke. It blamed secondhand smoke for 4,000 deaths each year in California from lung cancer or heart disease alone.

The most significant new finding is that young women exposed to secondhand smoke increase their risk of developing breast cancer between 68 percent and 120 percent. The disease kills about 40,000 women in the United States each year.

That finding conflicts with a 2004 report by the U.S. Surgeon General. Sanford Barsky, a UC, Los Angeles, researcher writing on behalf of the R.J. Reynolds tobacco company, told the board the report "either ignores mentioning or does not give the appropriate weight to studies which refute this association" between secondhand smoke and breast cancer.

California scientists say their research is more current than the Surgeon General's report. The California report went through an exhaustive review that delayed its release for nearly a year but ensures it is based on sound research, said Dr. John Froines, director of UCLA's Center for Occupational and Environmental Health and head of the scientific review panel.

R.J. Reynolds spokesman David Howard said regardless of the dangers from passive smoke indoors, no research supports regulators' decision to declare it an air pollutant.

"No studies exist that show that exposure outdoors leads to any increased risk of tobacco-associated illness," he said.

Next, the air board must consider regulatory steps to reduce exposure, a process that could take years.

"This is no longer some crazy, California, Left Coast way of thinking," said Cynthia Hallett, executive director of Berkeley-based Americans for Nonsmokers' Rights. She cited smoking bans that have been enacted or are being considered across the nation and in other countries.

Growing tobacco bans
The decision in the California state capital kicks off a process that will likely take two or three years as officials study ways to reduce exposure to second-hand smoke.

A spokeswoman for tobacco giant Philip Morris USA, a unit of Altria Group Inc., declined to comment.

In 1994, California became the first U.S. state to bar smoking in the workplace, and then followed up with bans on smoking in restaurants and bars. Other American cities and states have since adopted similar prohibitions.

Several California cities have enacted wider bans, such as San Francisco, which now prohibits smoking in city parks, and Los Angeles, which bars smoking at piers and beaches.

The effect is likely to be greatest outside of California, which already bans smoking in or near most public buildings, including bars and restaurants. Much of the initial effort in California will focus on public education emphasizing the scientific findings and Thursday's air board decision, said Paul Knepprath, vice president for government relations at the American Lung Association of California.

The association unsuccessfully pushed legislation in 2003 that would have banned smoking in motor vehicles containing young children, and could try for a similar law next year, Knepprath said.

The association may also push for nonsmoking floors or wings in apartment buildings, much as hotels offer smoke-free areas, Knepprath said.

"People live in apartments all across California who are exposed to secondhand smoke on a daily basis," Knepprath said. "It drifts from a common area or another apartment."

Hallett said that could one day force regulations requiring separate ventilation systems for smoking and nonsmoking apartments.

YearsOfDecay
01-27-2006, 03:50 PM
get ready..........Here it comes....................


http://www.historyplace.com/worldwar2/ww2-pix/nurem-34.jpg

Savington
01-29-2006, 02:05 PM
Post big pics?

Seriously, secondhand smoke sucks. I personally believe that if you want to smoke, you need to do it INSIDE your own home (I hate it when neighbors' friends
smoke cigarettes/cigars on their front porch, and I get hosed down in a bath of tobacco smoke when working in my own garage), or inside your own car with
the windows rolled all the way up (I hate it when I pull up to a stoplight and I'm forced to roll all my windows up because some asshole next to me is chain-smoking
out the window like it's his lifeforce). I have no problem with your habit, but it's like spitting; you need to do that shit where it doesn't bother other people.

Supper
01-29-2006, 02:25 PM
I personally believe that if you want to smoke, you need to do it INSIDE your own home
how about no.

I am sick and tired of coming into my apartment and having it smell like a week old ashtray because the asshole that lives beside me smokes inside.

Manntis
01-29-2006, 02:25 PM
They regulate cars and smoking in California, yet you can't go a single block without being able to buy a bean burrito...

Savington
01-29-2006, 10:37 PM
Supper, I said HOME. Not apartment. That means your single-unit dwelling,
equipped with windows that shut and your own ventilation system. I would
complain to your neighbor if my place smelled like smoke because of a shared ventilation system.

Zero
01-29-2006, 10:54 PM
Is nicotine a drug? By the law's definition, it is.
Is smoking flat out harmful and yields no positive cause? You bet.
Is smoking illegal like other drugs? No. Why? The government controls the manufacturing and distribution of it. Simply, the government makes entirely too much money off of tobacco to do it's duty and ban it.

ComradeGiant
01-29-2006, 11:03 PM
If the government weren't retarded they'd do the same thing with other drugs.

But they are, so organized crime will continue to make all the money.

Zero
01-29-2006, 11:37 PM
I don't want to smell cigg smoke... I had a neighbor 2 doors up that his wife made him smoke outside...

If I had my windows open, I could smell his smoke.

Where is the line drawn? It's legal for him to burn leaves or a cardboard box if he felt like it... breathing that can't be too good either.

Supper
01-29-2006, 11:45 PM
Supper, I said HOME. Not apartment. That means your single-unit dwelling,
equipped with windows that shut and your own ventilation system. I would
complain to your neighbor if my place smelled like smoke because of a shared ventilation system.
merely semantics Savington.

My apartment is my HOME.


and I taped a pack of nicorette to his door a week or so ago. He didn't care for it much.

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