October 8, 2004
Health club accommodates smokers
Owner constructs special
room where members can puff legally
JANE GEORGE
Health club? The privately-owned Frobisher Racquet Club has built a separate
indoor smoking room for club members. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)
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The Frobisher Racquet Club has a comfy smoking room that appears to meet the
letter, if not entirely the spirit, of Nunavut's tough new regulations about
smoking in or near work places.
The smoking room is a newly-built, completely enclosed addition to the second-floor
premises of the members-only recreation club, separated from the entrance to
its restaurant/bar by a short corridor and double doors.
The club's manager refused to comment on the new smoking room, referring a
request for more information to Bronyk Skavinsky, who owns the racquet club
building.
However, Skavinsky is on an extended trip out of Iqaluit and is unable to be
reached.
But this much is known: Skavinsky, a smoker, is said to have been concerned
by the new territorial regulations, which came into effect on May 1.
These clamp down on smoking in or near work places, including bars and restaurants.
Now other clubs and bars in town, including the Royal Canadian Legion, are
planning on building similar smoking spaces of their own.
The territory's Environmental Tobacco Smoke Work Site Regulations, which came
into effect on May 1, mean no one is supposed to smoke in or even near an enclosed
work site, such as an office building, business, bar or restaurant, where others
are on the job.
The Frobisher Racquet Club's smoking room squeaked by due to a generous interpretation
of Section 3 of the Workman's Safety Act that says employers may permit smoking
outside if it's in an independent structure and the smoke doesn't come into
contact with workers.
"An employer may permit smoking in a designated smoking structure outside
an enclosed work site, within a three metre radius of an entrance to or exit
from the enclosed work site, if smoke from the structure does not come in contact
with workers entering or leaving the enclosed work site," the act specifies.
Fines for non-compliance with the new regulations are $500 for individuals
and $5,000 for businesses.
"We haven't received any complaints that I'm aware of, otherwise we would
have responded to that," said Imo Adla, acting chief industrial safety
officer for the Workman's Compensation Board in Iqaluit, the agency responsible
for enforcing the act.
Meanwhile, the WCB is continuing its inspections of businesses and offices
in Iqaluit and other Nunavut communities.
"We do give out no-smoking signs at the same time we're doing inspections.
We are also reminding employers when we do inspections about the regulations.
We haven't found anyone breaking them. It's more of an education process first,"
Adla said.
Last Friday, the provinces of New Brunswick and Manitoba also went
smoke-free, with Saskatchewan going smoke-free on January 1.
Many Canadian cities in other provinces have also enacted smoke-free workplace
laws.
"Smoke-free workplace legislation is a matter of respect and dignity for
workers," says Joe Cherner, founder of Bar and Restaurant Employees Advocating
Together for a Healthy Environment (BREATHE). "All workers, including office,
restaurant, bar, bingo, bowling, casino, tavern, pub, and nightclub workers,
deserve a safe, healthy, smoke-free work environment, because tobacco smoke
causes cancer, respiratory illness, and heart disease."
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