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January 17, 2003
City moves ahead with smoking
ban
Restaurants and coffee
shops will soon be smoke-free
One last
puff: Smokers wont be allowed to light up inside public buildings once
council passes its no-smoking bylaw.
(FILE PHOTO)
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DENISE
RIDEOUT
Iqaluits restaurant
and coffee shop owners will soon be required by law to ban smoking in their
establishments, but bar owners can allow their customers to light up for a while
longer.
Iqaluit city council is
going ahead with its 100 per cent ban on smoking in all public places that allow
regular access to people under 18 years of age.
The city administration
is in the process of drafting a no-smoking bylaw for those establishments.
In a survey of 500 Iqaluit
residents conducted in August, 84 per cent said restaurants should be smoke-free
and 75 per cent believed coffee shops should be smoke-free.
But banning smoking in
Iqaluits bars is going to take a little more time.
Thats because the
city has the authority to ban smoking only in public bars, not in private ones.
Iqaluit has three private clubs: the Royal Canadian Legion, the Elks and the
Frobisher Bay Racquet Club.
Councillors decided during
this weeks session not to create an unfair playing field by banning smoking
in some bars and not others.
But this legal snag may
change later this year.
Rick Butler, the citys
chief administrative officer, told council that the Nunavut governments
department of justice is looking at changing the legislation regarding private
places.
City council then passed
a motion to ban smoking in restaurants and cafes, and a second motion to ban
smoking in all public places including bars once the Nunavut government
comes up with legislation allowing the city to do so.
The GN is expected to introduce
the new bill in the spring or fall sitting of the legislature.
In the meantime, city council
will ask bar owners in Iqaluit to voluntarily become non-smoking establishments.
City council is meeting
with bar and restaurant owners on Jan. 23 to get their feedback on the proposed
no-smoking bylaw.
But councillor Stu Kennedy
didnt like the idea of council going to restaurant and bar owners after
it had made its decisions regarding the smoking ban.
"I dont like
the way were approaching this," Kennedy said.
But Butler pointed out
that at a previous meeting with business owners, they asked to be allowed to
offer feedback on the proposed bylaw.
Butler said they could
do just that at the Jan. 23 meeting.
And bar and restaurant
owners know the city is on its way to banning smoking in all public places,
one councillor said.
"Were bringing
this forward. Its going to happen. Get ready, its coming,"
councillor Glenn Williams said.
"Smoking kills. Second-hand
smoke is bad. This is an issue of public health."
In the smoking survey,
50 per cent of respondents said smoking should be banned in Iqaluits bars.
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