riddlemay wrote:...(I'm sure it's not good for you, but there are probably 400 things that are worse for you that all of us are exposed to every day--car exhaust would be one obvious candidate--and none of those are being outlawed.) ...
JoelF wrote:It's a matter of personal rights, the government shouldn't get in the way, except when it affects other people.
G Wiv wrote:The politics of smoking, or any politics for that matter, are non starter subjects on LTHForum
JoelF wrote:I am very sensitive to cigarette smoke -- I'm not going to claim an allergy, but my eyes water excessively, my chest feels like it tightens up... I just despise the stuff.
I'm very, very happy to have it gone from restaurants. I've been 'burned' many times by a non-smoking section that is merely next to a smoking section, separated by no more than a booth divider...
abe_froeman wrote:I might be found in bars more often now!
David Hammond wrote:... and self-righteousness is always a drag.
Olde School wrote:When the Chicago law was enacted a while back (which mandated that city bars and restaurants be smoke-free by summer 2008--since superceded by the state law), Keefer's decided not to wait, but to declare itself smoke-free immediately. Owner Glen Keefer told me the restaurant lost some business and gained some business, so from a headcount perspective, it was pretty much a wash. However, he found that his dollar volume increased, since he no longer had smokers occupying his bar tables for hours at a time, and instead could use them for dining patrons.
sassafrass wrote:Reading some discussion on the Hop Leaf topic here made me wonder.
jimswside wrote:great law,
at the bars I am a regular at I have noticed no lack of customers. There is the hourly stream of smokers going out to their cars for a smoke, and then to return to their drinks.
Olde School wrote:When the Chicago law was enacted a while back (which mandated that city bars and restaurants be smoke-free by summer 2008--since superceded by the state law), Keefer's decided not to wait, but to declare itself smoke-free immediately. Owner Glen Keefer told me the restaurant lost some business and gained some business, so from a headcount perspective, it was pretty much a wash. However, he found that his dollar volume increased, since he no longer had smokers occupying his bar tables for hours at a time, and instead could use them for dining patrons.
leek wrote: . . . A friend of ours who owns a bar (who shall remain nameless) said that he couldn't afford to go smoke-free before the law was in effect, because the smokers would still have lots of other places to go and wouldn't go to his place.
JimInLoganSquare wrote:Let's all try to remember that the purpose of the smoking ban is not to protect patrons, who have a choice not to go to the offending establishment, but rather to protect the WORKERS in those establishments.
David Hammond wrote:JimInLoganSquare wrote:Let's all try to remember that the purpose of the smoking ban is not to protect patrons, who have a choice not to go to the offending establishment, but rather to protect the WORKERS in those establishments.
JiLS, you're more savvy concerning the thinking behind these laws than I'd be, but it's odd, is it not, that the workers in the bar seem generally unsympathetic to a ban that would protect them? (I base this on anecdotal evidence, but I've never talked to a bartender who seemed very enthusiastic about the smoking ban.)
Is Sacramento moving to ban smoking from parks to protect park workers?
JimInLoganSquare wrote:David Hammond wrote:JimInLoganSquare wrote:Let's all try to remember that the purpose of the smoking ban is not to protect patrons, who have a choice not to go to the offending establishment, but rather to protect the WORKERS in those establishments.
JiLS, you're more savvy concerning the thinking behind these laws than I'd be, but it's odd, is it not, that the workers in the bar seem generally unsympathetic to a ban that would protect them? (I base this on anecdotal evidence, but I've never talked to a bartender who seemed very enthusiastic about the smoking ban.)
Is Sacramento moving to ban smoking from parks to protect park workers?
I don't know about Sacramento; I don't think smoking in a park endangers anybody, assuming the butt gets squashed out properly. And regarding your first point, I'm not going to get into a debate about paternalistic lawmaking, but the fact is that for decades before OSHA was passed, millions of American workers willingly went into highly dangerous workplaces because that was how they made a living, and I don't doubt that some of them were also opposed to OSHA, because somebody (maybe their boss) told them it would shut down the plant or at least result in some firings. Another worthwhile point is the psychology of working in a dangerous environment; if you can't convince yourself that, all told, you are safe there, then you will just be a nervous wreck. I have some friends in the business of removing unexploded ordinance and munitions from military ranges; they somehow came to peace with the risk factor in their jobs, mainly because they knew that all the best science available was being implemented in their favor, and also knew their own capabilities, and were able to make a rational decision. Not so the bartender or waitron sucking down somebody's Camel smoke.