Saturday, May 16, 2009

Signing of the Bill

Governor Perdue has scheduled the bill signing for HB 2 on Tuesday May 19th at 11:30 am at the NC Capitol in the old House Chambers!

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

It passed!

HB2 just passed the House. This is a historic step for North Carolina! This is a great step that will protect restaurant and bar employees and patrons. While the bill did not include protection for all workers in places like bowling alleys or convenient stores, we will continue to work at a local level to protect all workers!

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

HB 2 Passes Senate Without Amendments!

Here's an update from the NC Alliance for Health.

HB 2, Prohibit Smoking in Public and Workplaces, passed third and final reading by the NC State Senate by a vote of 30 to 18. As you may recall from action last week in the Senate Health Care Committee, the bill was scaled back from a comprehensive worksites bill (that would cover all worksites) to a restaurants and bars only bill with some restoration of local control.

Despite the scaled back version of the bill, most see this as an HISTORIC vote for North Carolina and a step toward protecting public health. In its current form, the bill will make all restaurants and bars in North Carolina smoke-free – a huge victory in a tobacco state like North Carolina.

One amendment was offered and defeated during third reading debate:

· Sen. Phil Berger (R- ) offered an amendment that would have vastly broadened the definition of “private club” to include any organization that holds “a permit to sell alcoholic beverages and may or may not serve food for pay to anyone who is a member or member’s guest.” This amendment would have eliminated the restriction that “private clubs” exempted from the bill include only those that were private, non-profit 501c3 organizations (such as the Veterans of Foreign Wars or Elks Lodges), opening the exemption as a possibly larger loop-hole in the bill. This amendment would have allowed bars and/or restaurants to become private membership clubs by charging a nominal fee to become members. Other states with such exemptions have seen bars charge $1 “membership fees” to meet the terms of a “private membership club” so that they could permit smoking and skirt the law. This amendment was defeated by the close vote of 25 to 23. To see the vote count on this amendment, go to HB 2 Senate Amendment 3.
HB 2 will now return to the House where the House can either agree to the Senate’s version of the bill (known as concurrence) or disagree (knows as non-concurrence) and appoint a conference committee. Stay tuned for next steps for HB 2 in additional updates this week.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Teen supports House Bill 2 in battle against teen smoking

Here's a great letter to the editor from one of our advocates with the Heart Association. Colleen also just won the South Regional Award from the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids. Congrats Colleen!

As House Bill 2 goes to the General Assembly for debate, I hope our representatives will consider the dangers secondhand smoke pose to the health of their constituents and the effect House Bill 2 has on youth.

House Bill 2 not only significantly reduces most people's exposure to secondhand smoke, but can also act as a preventive measure for adolescents.

According to a May 2008 issue of the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, teens living in cities with restrictions on smoking in public places were 40 percent less likely to pick up the habit.

By preventing teenagers from beginning to smoke, we can also prevent them from obtaining life-threatening illnesses.

The Centers for Disease Control stated that if current smoking patterns persist, more than 5 million of today's teens will die prematurely because of smoking-related diseases.

As a senior in high school, I have seen the ramifications of tobacco use on my peers. I support House Bill 2 strongly because I don't want to continue watching my friends fall to this habit. I hope my senator will strive to protect them as well.

Colleen Daly, Asheville