April 18, 2003
Customers blow smoke rings around
bylaw
Many
continue to light up despite new regulation
CHARLOTTE
PETRIE
Tobacco users relaxed in
their favourite coffee shops, blowing smoke rings at the city of Iqaluit’s tough
new anti-smoking bylaw as it went into effect this past Tuesday.
Nunavut’s capital city
is the first community in the Canadian Arctic to pass such a bylaw, which restricts
smoking in all public places, except bars, and within three metres of all public
entrances.
Threatening all along that
they would not comply with the new regulation when the time came, outspoken
opposers put their smokes where their mouths were and lit up.
By mid-morning, Robert
Cavanaugh, the city’s chief bylaw officer, had already received numerous calls
from frustrated shop owners claiming that despite the new law, "They’re
smoking anyway."
"We heard a lighter
going — heard it but didn’t see it — and I was like, ‘You might as well not
flick it on the floor.’ So I gave him an ashtray," shop owner Elisapee
Sheutiapik said with a deep, raspy laugh.
Sheutiapik and her partner
Brian Twerdin run the Grind and Brew Café, a small room with metal chairs,
enameled wood tables and a few video gambling machines. And while Twerdin pours
coffee for sleepy-eyed early risers, Sheutiapik is seated at a table chatting
up a handful of regulars.
Despite the fact that the
non-smoking bylaw could all but extinguish business at their homey little hang-out,
there doesn’t appear to be a dark cloud lingering over the mood.
With a grin from ear to
ear, Sheutiapik hollers out to Twerdin with some homegrown northern humour,
"Hey Brian, Joe here can’t smoke anymore so he’s smoking all the char,"
she says as the tiny room erupts in laughter.
Sitting across from Joe
is ex-smoker Derrick Smith. Smith is just as riled up over the new law as his
die-hard-smoker friends.
"It really killed
the ambiance of the shop. I don’t smoke, but there’s probably six people who
are usually here that aren’t here this morning. It’s the company [that’s missing],"
Smith remarked.
"You could very easily
put up a sign saying this is a smoking establishment, and people could make
their choice accordingly," he added.
Sheutiapik is not only
a coffee shop owner, she’s also one of eight city councillors who voted on the
bylaw, sort of. When it came down to the third and final vote, Sheutiapik actually
walked out of council chambers, refusing to even witness the passing of the
law.
"I left the room because
I know that most of my customers here do smoke, and already some of them are
not here this morning," she explained.
The issue was hotly debated
in council on several occasions before the bylaw finally passed on Feb. 28.
At one stage, council passed a motion restricting people from smoking within
10 metres of all public entrances.
Some councillors argued
that the distance was too extreme, saying that one would have to go across the
road or to the next block to get 10 metres away from any entrance, and that
in so doing, they might find themselves in front of another entrance.
The point was eventually
taken, and the distance changed to three metres — much to the disappointment
of former deputy mayor Kirt Ejesiak, who fought hard to keep it at 10 metres.
The city planned to distribute
information kits to all affected business owners a week before the bylaw kicked
in. However, the kits weren’t ready on time and instead were delivered the day
before.
And even before that, Sheutiapik
told council she was already getting flak from a few of her customers, who were
dropping hints that they had no intention of complying either way.
For now the city has resigned
itself to carrying a soft stick when it comes to enforcement, Cavanaugh admitted.
"Our strategy in the
first three weeks is to communicate with the business owners and give out warnings.
We’re not going to come out with an iron fist on the first day and fine people,"
he said.
And on this day, anyway,
Sheutiapik is still smiling.
"Hey Bill," she
yells out to a familiar face, "Want to buy some ashtrays?"
CAPTION
A rebel lights up at a
local coffee shop the day the city’s new anti-smoking bylaw went into effect.
(PHOTO BY CHARLOTTE PETRIE)
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