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   <title>www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com - cigarettes-news</title>
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          <title>Exploring Retailers Abandonment Of Cigarettes Sales</title>
          <pubDate>2011-11-22 15:31:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Patricia McDaniel, Ph.D. is an Assistant Adjunct Professor in the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences.  She received her Ph.D.  in sociology from Rutgers University.  She completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the Center for cheap cigarettes Control Research and Education at UCSF.  Dr. McDaniels research focuses on broad strategies that buy cigarettes companies have employed in corporate social responsibility or other public relations campaigns.  She has also begun exploring a new and understudied area of discount cigarettes control:   voluntary, pro-health cigarettes-related initiatives by businesses and public and media responses to those initiatives.  
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          <title>New Cigarette Tax Would Help Save Many Lives</title>
          <pubDate>2011-11-20 15:29:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Thursday marks the American Cancer Society&amp;#39;s Great American Smokeout, a day the society started in 1976 in California to encourage smokers to quit, nonsmokers not to start and for Californians to get involved with initiatives that protect communities from Big cigarettes.While discount cigarette online use is the most preventable cause of cancer death in the U.S, it accounts for one out of every three cancer deaths in California and costs state taxpayers more than $9 billion annually in health care costs because of smoking cigarettes-related illnesses.These statistics can drastically change, and as the official sponsor of birthdays, the American Cancer Society encourages Californians to take an important step toward a healthier life — one that can lead to reducing cancer risk and creating more birthdays.A historic opportunity is coming to our state in the form of the California Cancer Research Act.If approved by California voters on the June 5, 2012, ballot, the act will increase cigarettes store taxes by $1 a pack and invest the revenues in cancer research, online cigarettes prevention and enforcement programs. Nearly $600 million will be generated every year for cancer research in California. This investment will make California one of the leading centers of cancer research in the world.The act will help protect our youth from Big cigarettes online by keeping 200,000 kids from ever starting to smoke. Recent studies show that increasing cigarettes taxes by $1 per pack is one of the most effective ways to reduce buy cigarettes use, especially among youth. The increase will triple the state&amp;#39;s funding for smoking cigarettes cessation and cheap cigarettes use prevention. In fact, if we don&amp;#39;t increase funding for discount cigarettes control in California, we can expect smoking cigarettes rates to rise 9 percent by 2016.The California Cancer Research Act is supported by the American Cancer Society, American Heart Association, American Lung Association, Campaign for cigarettes-Free Kids, LiveStrong, the Lance Armstong Foundation and Stand Up To Cancer.
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          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/new_cigarette_tax_would_help_save_many_lives.html</link>
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          <title>Smokers And Cigarettes Users</title>
          <pubDate>2011-11-06 21:35:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Smokers and cheap cigarette online users will no longer be hired at Providence Alaska Medical Center starting Nov. 17, according to hospital officials.When prospective hires apply they will take a drug and buy cigarette online test. If they fail, applicants can reapply in six months.The new policy does not affect current employees.All three major hospitals in Anchorage -- Providence, Alaska Regional Hospital and the Alaska Native Medical Center -- have smoke-free campuses, but Providence is the only one to take the policy a step further.Tammy Green, Providence&amp;#39;s regional director of Health, says the hospital already has a no-fragrance policy, and a no cheap cigarettes policy will greatly benefit patients.
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          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/smokers_and_cigarettes_users.html</link>
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          <title>Alaska Woman Files Lawsuit Against Cigarettes Giant</title>
          <pubDate>2011-10-18 22:53:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The common-law wife of a man who died of lung cancer has filed a civil lawsuit against the nation&amp;#39;s largest cigarettes online company, accusing it of engaging in a deceptive advertising campaign designed to get people to smoke, including those in Alaska villages.In a complaint filed in Bethel Superior Court, Delores Hunter of Marshall accuses Philip Morris USA Inc. and its parent company, Altria Group Inc., of making and marketing discount cigarette online even though they knew the products were addictive and caused cancer.Hunter is the court-appointed personal representative of Benjamin Francis&amp;#39; estate. The lawsuit seeks more than $100,000 on behalf of the estate.The trial is scheduled to begin this week.Francis died of lung cancer in December 2004 in Marshall after enduring &amp;#34;great pain and suffering,&amp;#34; according to the complaint. It says he favored Marlboro brand cigarettes, made by Philip Morris, which is headquartered in Richmond, Va.The lawsuit, which was filed in 2006, also names the Alaska Commercial Co., an Anchorage-based company that sells buy cigarettes in rural Alaska.Francis smoked online cigarettes manufactured and sold by Philip Morris for most of his life, the complaint says.&amp;#34;He was extremely attracted to the Marlboro advertising and the promotion of its product as one to be used by strong, healthy, independent young men living in wide open spaces,&amp;#34; the complaint says.Francis smoked Marlboro cheap cigarettes even though the companies knew they caused cancer and actually promoted them as being safe and beneficial to users, the complaint says.Steven Tervooren, a lawyer in Anchorage representing Philip Morris USA, was not available for comment Monday. Both the Alaska Commercial Co. and Hunter&amp;#39;s lawyer, Don Bauemeister, did not immediately return calls Monday.
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          <title>Smoke-Free Rental Housing Bill</title>
          <pubDate>2011-09-10 12:24:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Calif. Senator Alex Padilla (D-Pacoima) announced today that Governor Jerry Brown has signed into law SB 332. This new law expands the availability of smoke-free housing in California by allowing landlords to prohibit smoking cigarettes in rental units. The law goes into effect on January 1, 2012.With the Governors action today, we will see the availability of smoke-free, multi-family housing grow throughout California, said Senator Padilla. While more than 86% of Californians do not smoke, there is currently very little smoke-free housing in California. Living in multi-family housing should not compromise the health of renters or their children.  This new law will provide tenants with healthier choices, said Padilla.Currently, a landlord may include terms in a rental agreement such as restricting pets, noise, and specific furniture such as waterbeds.  Despite the negative health effects of secondhand smoke cigarettes there is nothing in current law that explicitly permits a landlord to restrict smoking cigarettes.  SB 332 would change this while complying with all federal, state, and local requirements governing changes to the terms of a rental or lease agreement.Over 30 percent of California housing is multi-family residences. Secondhand smoke cigarettes can travel in and out of open windows and doors, through shared ventilation systems, walls, ceiling crawl spaces, and gaps around electrical wiring, light fixtures, plumbing, ductwork, and even baseboards.In 2006, the State of California Air Resources Board identified secondhand smoke cigarettes as a Toxic Air Contaminant. The United States Environmental Protection Agency has classified secondhand smoke cigarettes as a group A carcinogen, the most dangerous class of carcinogen.We know that second hand smoke cigarettes is harmful. With this new law renters will have much greater chance of finding a smoke-free environment in which to live, said Senator Padilla.A December 2010 study by the American Academy of Pediatrics found that children who live in apartments where no one smokes inside have a 45% increase in cotinine levels (used to measure buy cigarettes exposure) compared with detached homes. The report states that multi-family housing may be a significant source of secondhand cigarettes online smoke cigarettes exposure for children, at levels associated with morbidity. The report concludes that, ultimately, smoke-free multiunit housing could improve health status by reducing nonsmokers exposure to cigarettes smoke cigarettes in their own units.According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, secondhand smoke cigarettes is responsible for an estimated 49,400 deaths among nonsmokers each year in the United States, including 3,400 lung cancer deaths and 46,000 deaths due to heart disease. Secondhand smoke cigarettes exposure causes as many as 300,000 children in the United States under the age of 18 to suffer lower respiratory tract infections, such as pneumonia and bronchitis.
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          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/smoke_free_rental_housing_bill.html</link>
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          <title>Anti-Cigarettes Programs</title>
          <pubDate>2011-09-09 12:22:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Researchers with the University of California, San Francisco and the University of California, Merced will examine the effectiveness of state and local anti-smoking cigarettes programs across the United States to ensure that health authorities are able to use their increasingly limited resources to support and defend the most effective approaches.Stanton A. Glantz, PhD, UCSF professor of medicine; James Lightwood, PhD, UCSF assistant professor of clinical pharmacy; and Anna V. Song, PhD, UC Merced professor of psychology, have been awarded a five-year, $2.6 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to study which anti-smoking cigarettes programs are working best and how the cheap cigarette online industry tries to prevent states from pursuing the most effective cheap cigarettes control policies and programs.cigarettes use remains the leading preventable cause of death in California and the nation.  Not all programs are equally effective in reducing smoking cigarettes or bringing down health costs. Understanding which programs are best can help inform government policy decisions and make sure money is spent on effective programs, the researchers say.Californias cigarettes online control program has already saved California taxpayers and businesses well over $86 billion in direct health costs, Glantz said. With this research, we hope to inform policy makers and public health professionals how we can essentially eliminate buy cigarette online as a public health problem in California in the next few years.Glantz and Song will use qualitative and quantitative methods to accomplish three specific goals:Document and analyze the variations in buy cigarettes control policymaking and in how programs are run. The results will serve as the basis for recommendations to create the most effective and efficient cigarettes control strategies and policies.Define the relationships between spending on state discount cigarettes control programs, smoking cigarettes, and health care expenditures, and then use these relationships to quantify the effects of program intensity and quality.Quantify the effects of cigarettes for sale control policies -- such as the clean indoor air laws California pioneered -- on smoking cigarettes initiation, progression and cessation, and health disparities.We are combining modern understanding of adolescent and young adult psychology with mathematical models to understand the spread and decline in cigarettes use, Song said. Its similar to the way epidemiologists understand the spread of infectious diseases, with the cigarettes companies playing the role of mosquitoes spreading disease.The field of cigarettes control has remained dynamic with new legislation and advocacy programs. For example, the Family Smoking Prevention and cigarettes Control Act granted the U.S. Food and Drug Administration authority over cigarettes products. It also repealed federal preemption of state and local actions to regulate the time, nature and place of cigarettes advertising and promotion, creating new opportunities for state and local cigarettes control policy making. California is also considering strengthening its own clean indoor air law to close loopholes that remain from the 1990s, when the current law was enacted.Last year, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention increased the visibility of cigarettes control through several American Recovery and Reinvestment Act programs, including funding for cigarettes control media campaigns in all states. It also has the Communities Putting Prevention to Work program, which is funding 21 state, local and tribal programs to implement policy-oriented cigarettes control strategies.UCSF is a leading university dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care.UC Merced, the 10th campus in the University of California system, has a special mission to increase college attendance rates among students in the San Joaquin Valley. It serves as a major base of advanced research and as a stimulus to economic growth and diversification.
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          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/anti_cigarettes_programs.html</link>
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          <title>LA Not Doing Enough To Stop Smoking And Cancer</title>
          <pubDate>2011-08-29 21:41:00</pubDate> 
          <description>A new report from the American Cancer Society says Louisiana is not doing enough to prevent the disease. The cancer society says a lot of its due to low taxes and the legislatures unwillingness to ban smoking cigarettes in bars and casinos.Louisiana is third lowest with the 36-cents-per-pack cigarette tax.  It has not been increased since 2002, said the cancer societys Amber Stevens.  We need a comprehensive program when it comes to smoke cigarettes free laws in order to save lives.Louisiana has $9 million of cheap cigarette online use prevention spending in the pipeline.  Stevens says it needs to be more than $50 million.
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          <title>Smokeless Cigarettes Part Of Army Regulation Smoking Restrictions</title>
          <pubDate>2011-08-28 21:39:00</pubDate> 
          <description>With Army regulations restricting the areas of use for smoking cigarettes, smokeless cheap cigarette online has become a popular alternative. Many users believe smokeless cigarettes store is more convenient because it doesnt emit smoke, leave a smell on their clothes or harm others around them.But what cigarettes online users may not realize is those Army restrictions apply to all forms of cigarettes, including snuff, dip and chewing cigarettes. That means that soldiers and civilians using smokeless online cigarettes or discount cigarettes in a federal facility can be held in violation of Army Regulation.Maj. Arlene LeDoux, chief public health nurse, at Bayne-Jones Army Community Hospitals Department of Preventive Medicine, said that lack of knowledge of the smoking cigarettes restrictions can affect others.Can you imagine how horrible it would be for a kid to pick up a discarded spit bottle or can of smokeless discount cigarette online and put it in their mouth? LeDoux asked. Its just not safe to leave something like that lying around.LeDoux said soldiers increased use of smokeless cigarettes for sale can be caused by many factors — the most widely held belief is that its a safer alternative to cigarettes; however, it is just as dangerous as smoking cigarettes, she said.Many soldiers try to give up smoking cigarettes cigarettes and then end up going to smokeless cigarettes, LeDoux said. They dont realize theyre just setting themselves up for another problem. People try to find other alternatives for their addiction, but quitting is the right answer.Patricia Taylor, health promotion nurse, Preventive Medicine, said soldiers may also become dependent on cigarettes when they deploy.Companies that produce cigarettes and smokeless cigarettes send free products to soldiers with the intention of getting them addicted to their product, she said. When soldiers come back to the States, that product is no longer free, so they pay to feed that addiction.According to www.tricare.mil, some 19 percent of 18-24-year-old men in the armed forces use smokeless cigarettes, more than double the national rate.To help combat those numbers, Preventive Medicines cigarettes Cessation Program was implemented to help soldiers quit their addiction to cigarettes.When a soldier enters the program, the first step they go through is a self-evaluation to measure their readiness to quit.After they fill out several questionnaires, we have a one-on-one session where we look at how they evaluated themselves and see if they are ready to continue to the next stage, said Taylor.If its determined that the soldier is ready to start the quitting process, they have the option of seeing a health provider to help them through recovery and withdrawal with nicotine patches or prescription medicine. From there, individuals have the option to quit by joining a structured group, go it alone, or use the Department of Defenses Quit cigarettes — Make Everyone Proud campaign at www.ucanquit2.org.Taylor said people must be mentally ready to quit for counseling to be effective.Sometimes soldiers will come to us and say my doctor said I have to do this. We tell them they have to be confident and their health has to become a priority. If its not important to them, they will eventually start back in the habit.Even with all the help Preventive Medicine provides, recovering from nicotine addiction takes time.We will get people who come in and it will be their sixth or seventh time trying to quit, Taylor said. As many times as they want to come back, we will work with them until they are successful.
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          <title>Seeing Past The Smoke Of MVs Cigarettes Scores </title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-31 10:27:00</pubDate> 
          <description>For the second year in a row, a local coalition has awarded Mountain View its highest marks in cigarettes-control efforts among cities in Santa Clara County.However, the &amp;#39;A&amp;#39; given by the online cigarettes Free Coalition of Santa Clara County and Community in their &amp;#34;2010-2011 Community&amp;#39;s Health on cheap cigarettes Report Card&amp;#34; released on Wednesday, July 27 comes only three months after the second &amp;#39;D&amp;#39; the city received from the American Lung Associations State of cigarettes store Control Report 2010.The disparate difference in the two scores may have all to do with what each organization measured.cigarettes Free Coalition based its grades on the city&amp;#39;s cigarettes for sale advertising and displays, and preventing youth access to cigarettes. They gave points for the compliance rate with window advertising regulations, enforcement of underage discount cigarette online sales laws, and creation of policies requiring a discount cigarettes retailer license.However, the American Lung Association developed a grading system as a way to let people know the state of cheap cigarette online control where they live, explains Serena Chen, American Lung Association Policy Advocacy Director for California. It calculated buy cigarette online control as an average of three different areas: smokefree outdoor air, smokefree housing and the reduction of cigarettes product sales. Each of these sections got a point, which translates to a letter grade of A through F, with the possibility of bonus points.Mountain View received a D grade for its outdoor smoking cigarettes policies with a total of four points. Smoking is currently restricted on public facilities and within outdoor amphitheater seating areas. But could improve if the city limited smoking cigarettes in:    Outdoor dining areas    Entryways like entrances, exits or other openings into enclosed areas    Service areas where people stand or wait in line, such as public transit stops or ATM lines    All outdoor public events like fairs, farmers markets, parades and concerts    Parks, beaches, hiking trails or other recreation areasMountain View scored an F grade with zero points for its smokefree housing policies. To meet ALAs recommendations, Mountain View needs municipal codes that:    Restrict smoke cigarettes in outdoor common areas in multi-unit housing units, including areas where smoking cigarettes is allowed    Designated non-smoking cigarettes units within multi-unit housing units    Require landlords of apartments or sellers of condominiums to disclose information about smoking cigarettes restrictions on the property to potential tenants or buyersUnlike in the cigarettes Free Coalition report, Mountain View&amp;#39;s underaged smoking cigarettes continued to be a problem and could use some work on reducing cigarettes product sales, according to the ALA study. The city scored one point for a grade of D in this area.The city, however, with the help of funds received from the county has already started work on an update to the cigarettes ordinance as a way to improve their ALA grade, according to the City&amp;#39;s Youth Resources Manager Kimberly Castro.Castro explained that, for example, currently the Castro Street restaurants with sidewalk cafe have been issued permits under condition that smoking cigarettes not be allowed.&amp;#34;It&amp;#39;s not an actual ordinance,&amp;#34; Castro said. But Castro added, as the context of a new ordinance takes shapes, possible language includes the ban of smoking cigarettes within 25 feet of any entrance into a building.But in contrast again to the cigarettes Free Coalition grades, between 2009 to 2010, no city in Santa Clara County had enacted tighter smoking cigarettes policies compared to the other 38 California cities that participated in the ALA report.There was no way we could go into every city and sniff the air, says Chen, so the reports findings are strictly based on city and county municipal codes.In the cigarettes Free Coalition report San Jose climbed up from an &amp;#39;F&amp;#39; grade to a &amp;#39;B&amp;#39; after the city adopted a new cigarettes-control policy earlier this year. In addition to Mountain View, Saratoga, and Milpitas also received an &amp;#39;A.&amp;#39;Dr. Martin Fenstersheib, the county&amp;#39;s health officer, said thecounty spends about $830 million annually on treatment of cigarettes-related health effects.Last year the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act awarded Santa Clara County Public Health Department a $6.9 million federal grant for cigarettes prevention efforts. The department will use the grant to decrease the prevalence of smoking cigarettes in the community and conduct efforts to prevent teens from taking up smoking cigarettes.The ALA is quick to point out in defense of its rigorous grading system that cigarettes is still the No. 1 source of preventable disease and death in California. cigarettes has been shown to cause cancer, heart disease, respiratory diseases and infant death.Approximately one death out of every five in the U.S. is attributed to smoking cigarettes each year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported in 2008. An estimated 49,000 of these deaths are caused by secondhand smoke.If you believe that passing these laws is a valid way to protect people, you should look at the possibilities,&amp;#34; said Serena Chen, ALA policy advocacy director for California.Its not like were punishing the cities,&amp;#34; she said. &amp;#34;Were just looking at how cities are protecting the citizens … this is how they compare.
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          <title>New Policy Limits Cigarettes Use At SCSU</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-30 10:25:00</pubDate> 
          <description>St. Cloud State University today begins a yearlong countdown to the elimination of buy cigarettes use on campus.The first step of the phased-in change is the designation of 21 locations on campus where cigarettes online use will be allowed for the next 12 months. Next Aug. 1, the university will prohibit cigarettes use.Its not the biggest nuisance in the world, but Im glad they are trying to get rid of it, Derrick Santos said this week, after he stopped by the universitys admissions office to pick up some information for his daughter, who is considering attending St. Cloud State.Eighteen of the 21 designated areas are north of University Bridge, with several outside campus residence halls. All will have signs marking their location.cigarettes use on campus, and smoking cigarettes cheap cigarettes in particular, have been issues that St. Cloud State leaders have discussed for years. In 2002, 70 percent of students surveyed supported a policy that prohibited smoking cigarettes within 50 feet of most buildings on campus. That same survey also found that the number of students who said they didnt smoke cigarettes had continued to increase, from 71 percent in 2000 to 86 percent in 2008.And earlier this year, 63 percent of students who voted in Student Government elections approved of the two-phase plan that begins today. That non-binding student vote essentially was a recommendation to university President Earl H. Potter III to adopt the recommendation of a 13-member Smoking Policy Review Task Force. That group had been studying the issue of cigarettes for sale use on campus since mid-2010, when the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system encouraged MnSCU schools to analyze their cigarettes-use policies.By August 2012, the university will be cigarettes-free but will comply with the Minnesota Clean Indoor Air Act, which allows cheap cigarette online use in traditional Native American ceremonies, scientific studies and theatrical productions, according to a memo from Potter sent this week to the campus.cigarettes use also will be permitted inside private vehicles on university property as long as respect for individuals and the environment is demonstrated, according to a memo Potter wrote to the university community.
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          <title>Michigans Smoking Ban Popular</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-29 15:52:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Two reports released today show public support for Michigan&amp;#39;s year-old smoking cigarettes ban is growing, and compliance is high.A statewide poll commissioned by the American Cancer Society shows support has increased eight points to 74 percent since a similar poll was conducted in March 2009.Conducted by EPIC-MRA, the poll of 600 likely or registered voters was taken between May 9 and May 11. It had a margin of error of plus or minus four percentage points.That poll showed 93 percent of those surveyed are going out to eat in bars and restaurants just as often or more often than before Michigan&amp;#39;s workplace smoking cigarettes ban was passed in May 2010. And 23 percent of non-smokers polled said they are more likely to go out to eat in bars and restaurants.Also released today was the Michigan Department of Community Health&amp;#39;s smoke-free air law complaint survey of county health departments.That MDCH survey says the state has received 1,126 complaints of violations in restaurants, bars and bowling alleys since it took effect in May 2010. State health leaders said of the 1,126 violations, 101 of them resulted in citations and two required cease orders.When the 365 complaints received from non-food service establishments are included, the statewide total is 1,491 violations and 117 issued citations. To see the survey, click here.We are pleased with businesses and with the publics response with the law, said Jean Chabut, MDCH deputy director of public health.The popularity of the law with the public is a major reason why we have few violations. The law is protecting the publics health and the health of employees,&amp;#34; Chabut said.American Cancer Society leaders point out that Michigan&amp;#39;s compliance number are far less than the first year after Ohio went smokefree, which prompted a total of 54,619 complaints from Dec. 7, 2006, to Dec. 7, 2007.&amp;#34;There should be no doubt that Michigan lawmakers made the right choice in the opinion of the public and business community when they passed the state&amp;#39;s smokefree air law,&amp;#34; said Judy Stewart, state government relations director for the American Cancer Society and campaign manager of the Michigan Campaign for Smokefree Air.The news comes after a recent state study of 40 bar employees that showed a significant decrease in second-hand smoke cigarettes exposure.Michigan was the 38th state to ban smoking cigarettes in the workplace when the law took effect in May 2010. It banned smoke cigarettes at work sites and at outdoor areas where food and beverages are served.Cigarette smoke, a known carcinogen, is shown in studies to cause cancers of the throat, mouth, nasal cavity, esophagus, stomach, pancreas, kidney, bladder, and cervix and acute myeloid leukemia. And lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer deaths in U.S. men and women, with between 90 to 80 percent due to smoking cigarettes.
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          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/michigan_s_smoking_ban_popular.html</link>
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          <title>Council Gives Nod Of Support To Cigarettes Ban At County Fair</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-28 15:51:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The Coos County Fair is known for its aroma.The spicy smell of grilled meat, the sweet smell of fried scones and air-whipped cotton candy, along with the sometimes odiferous smell of farm animals in their pens, wafts up in the summer heat at the popular annual event.But theres one aroma some people would just as soon not smell at the fair — cigarettes.In a discussion that became heated at times, the Bandon City Council voted 4-2 last week to support a smoke-free Coos County Fair.That would mean no cigarettes, pipes, cigars, hookahs, chewing or cheap cigarettes of any kind on the fairs properties.Coos County cigarettes Prevention Program Coordinator and Bandon resident Stephen Brown is seeking support for the idea from South Coast city councils and other agencies in the form of a letter. The proposal will then be presented to the Coos County Fair &amp;#38; Rodeo Board, along with the letters of support. Brown said it would take three to four years to implement such a ban at the fair, but added that there is a lot of enthusiasm for the idea.Its all about the children, he said.Studies show that school-based buy cigarettes prevention education programs havent been successful. Rather, children learn from what they see others doing.If you put them in areas where smoking cigarettes is widely acceptable, they will smoke, Brown told the council.Brown said the county fair is a family event where smoking cigarettes is prevalent.The message is that you cant have a good time without smoking cigarettes, Brown said of the fair. He commended the council on adopting a smoke-free policy for all city-owned properties, including the entire City Park. He said many fairs have adopted cigarettes-free policies as well.But his idea wasnt met cheerfully by all councilors.Did you think of asking people what they wanted? asked Councilor Chris Powell. First its smoking cigarettes, next flip-flops and shorts.Youre making silly analogies, Brown responded. Flip-flops and shorts dont kill you.Other councilors questioned how such a ban would be enforced.People arent smoking cigarettes 10 feet from the entrance to buildings, Mayor Mary Schamehorn said. The problem with rules that cant be enforced is people laugh at them. Nobody pays attention to that law in Old Town.Ten feet is in the middle of the street, said Powell, who owns Bandon Baking Co. in Old Town. Should they smoke cigarettes in the street?Thats kind of silly, Brown responded. In Coos County, four to five people die every week because of cigarettes. If you had a natural disaster, youd want to help. Its not perfect ... but the rules do change the culture.Brown added that rules can be enforced with signage.Most people will follow the rule at a public place like that and it also empowers others to enforce the rule, he said.The cigarettes online ban would be for fair properties only, Brown said, which concerned both Schamehorn and Councilor Brian Vick. Many fair-goers also have animals entered and camp on the fairgrounds for the entire week. Schamehorn said it didnt seem right not to allow those people to smoke, at least in their trailers or in a designated area on the fairgrounds.Were not telling people not to smoke, just that its inappropriate to do it at a family event, Brown said. The more kids see people smoking cigarettes, the more acceptable it becomes.The vote ended with councilors Vick and Powell voting against supporting the idea and councilors Mike Claassen, Nancy Drew, Claudine Hundhausen and Geri Procetto voting in favor.Kids do what you do, not what you say, said Claassen, who made the motion in favor. Lets take a stand.I abhor smoking cigarettes, but I cant support this, Vick said after the vote. Its legal, its a personal choice, and if you ban it, no one will go to the fair. 
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          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/council_gives_nod_of_support_to_cigarettes_ban_at_county_fair.html</link>
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          <title>Smoking Bans Walk A Thin Line</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-27 15:50:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Earlier this month, spurred by a group of local students, the South Portland City Council banned the use of cheap cigarette online products from city-owned parks, beaches and recreation facilities.Around the same time the South Portland council was debating the merits of the smoking cigarettes ban, officials at the Los Angeles Unified School District were eliminating flavored milk from school menus, at the behest of a celebrity TV chef and child obesity advocate.While chocolate milk and discount cigarettes may not seem to have a lot in common, they are in this case both signs of how it is becoming increasingly acceptable for government to impose on residents its idea of healthy living. It is a trend that bears watching, as officials walk the line between good public health policy and infringing on personal freedom.It is a line that has never seemed so blurry, because what start as government actions with the best of intentions open the way for the slow eroding of personal freedoms. Officials get incrementally more comfortable with taking things away, and the public gets incrementally more comfortable with having them taken.Take the ban on smoking cigarettes, for example. First, smoking cigarettes bans were enacted in workplaces, then restaurants, then bars, all of which were first met with resistance before becoming commonplace. But now, South Portlands ban extends to all city-owned properties, including vast outdoor parks. In addition, a 25-foot no-smoking cigarettes buffer zone extends from the property line out 25 feet, unless the neighboring land is a private residence. That means a business that borders city property cannot have a smoking cigarettes area with 25 feet of the line, even on its own property.Also, the ban applies to all cigarettes store products, not just cigarettes, so chewing buy cigarette online is gone, as well, all because of an ordinance originally intended to keep people from blowing smoke cigarettes on their fellow beachgoers.And South Portland is far from alone. In April, Scarborough enacted a similar smoking cigarettes ban, and Westbrook, Portland and Lewiston already had cigarettes for sale bans on the books. University of Maine established a voluntary no-smoking cigarettes policy on campus for 2011, and a mandatory ban goes into effect Jan. 1. Smoking has been banned for two years now at all state parks.Now, few can argue with the health benefits that have been gained as restrictions on smoking cigarettes have tightened. It is certainly much more enjoyable to go into a bar or a restaurant without having to squint through a thick wall of cigarette smoke, and fewer places to smoke cigarettes means fewer people will start and keep smoking cigarettes.But the same argument used to ban smoking cigarettes – that it is unhealthy for both the smokers and those nearby – can, and has, been used to forward other public health causes, such as the chocolate milk ban.And that is where the ground really becomes shaky.
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          <title>Oregon Colleges And Universities Plan To Go Smoke-free</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-26 15:48:00</pubDate> 
          <description>On a sunny morning last week, a handful of students smoke cigarettes cigarettes as they stand on a small patch of gravel on the edge of Portland Community College&amp;#39;s Sylvania campus. More come, smoke cigarettes and then return to class through the day. It&amp;#39;s one of four areas reserved for smokers, each on the fringe of the Southwest Portland campus. cigarettes store is completely banned from PCC&amp;#39;s other two campuses.Students are finding places to smoke cigarettes increasingly scarce. Colleges want to wipe out discount cigarette online and the dangers of second-hand smoke, promote better health, reduce litter -- and prepare students for a near universal smoke-free workplace in a state where policy banned smokers from public buildings, restaurants and some parks years ago. By next fall, most smokers at Oregon universities will have to leave campus to light up.The University of Oregon, Western Oregon University and Southern Oregon University plan to ban all cigarettes, including chewing, on campus in fall 2012. Oregon State University will ban smoking cigarettes at the same time. The state&amp;#39;s other three public universities allow smoking cigarettes outside in certain areas and have no plans to change.cigarettes already is banned at Oregon Health &amp;#38; Science University, four community colleges including PCC, and 10 small private colleges and satellite campuses. Another three private colleges and Chemeketa Community College prohibit smoking cigarettes.But most Oregon colleges and universities have been slow to adopt the policies.&amp;#34;You can&amp;#39;t smoke cigarettes in a bar, but you can smoke cigarettes on college campuses,&amp;#34; said Donna Lane,  business professor and co-chairwoman of Southern Oregon University&amp;#39;s cigarettes-Free Initiative.Growing momentum to snuff outHigher education has a smoker-friendly history. Some parents of today&amp;#39;s students could puff their Marlboros and Camels in class, as could their professors, before colleges started clearing classrooms of smoke cigarettes in the 1970s.Momentum for cigarettes-free campuses is growing, said Ty Patterson,  director of the National Center for cheap cigarettes Policy in Missouri. If colleges and universities haven&amp;#39;t adopted bans, they are considering them, he said.  &amp;#34;All public and private colleges and universities virtually will be buy cigarette online free within 10 years,&amp;#34; he says.Oregon is relatively aggressive in banning cheap cigarette online from campus, but lags frontrunners, such as North Carolina in the heart of online cigarettes country where about 40 colleges and universities are cigarettes-free.PCC, which enrolled 43,400 students this spring, was among the first in Oregon to ban cigarettes online in fall 2009. Before that, students could smoke cigarettes in designated areas, but many students complained of walking by huddled smokers, and smoke cigarettes drifted into air conditioning ducts, said spokesman Dana Haynes. After the ban, smokers lit up in the surrounding neighborhoods or woods. But neighbors complained, so the Sylvania campus designated four gravel smoking cigarettes areas with waist-high urns for cigarette butts.&amp;#34;Neighbors have been very happy,&amp;#34; Haynes said.Michael Christiansen, 43,  a psychology major, said he was happy with it too, especially after getting cited twice trying to smoke. PCC security has issued 558 violation, with fines from $25 up to $75.&amp;#34;I think this is fair compromise,&amp;#34; he said last week about the smoking cigarettes areas. Before the areas were created a few months ago, &amp;#34;I went down in the forest and made a bunch of neighbors mad,&amp;#34; he says. &amp;#34;I felt bad about having to go hide like a 16-year-old.&amp;#34;Melody Albright, 23, a fine arts major, said the smoking cigarettes areas work for her. She had been walking up to a distant public street to light up. &amp;#34;I was late for a couple of classes.&amp;#34;The coming ban at Southern Oregon University is part of an initiative to improve both physical and mental health, said Lane, who helped with the university&amp;#39;s cigarettes-free policy.&amp;#34;We&amp;#39;re not trying to shame people who smoke,&amp;#34; she said. &amp;#34;It is really about them being healthy.&amp;#34;While students usually help develop cigarettes-free policies, some students -- even nonsmokers -- oppose the changes. After Southern Oregon University adopted the ban, a student survey in May showed only a slim majority supported it, even though 77 percent were nonsmokers.One student called the policy &amp;#34;draconian.&amp;#34; Another said, &amp;#34;When did we get to Soviet Russia? I don&amp;#39;t smoke, but people should be allowed to.&amp;#34; Partially banned in OregonThree Oregon public universities ban cigarettes from some, but not all areas.Portland State University, which draws many older commuter students, expanded areas off limits to smoking cigarettes in 2007. It banned cigarettes sales on campus and bars smoking cigarettes within 25 feet of building entrances and in university housing, parking lots, covered walkways, patios and its urban plaza.The Oregon Institute of Technology in Klamath Falls, which allows smoking cigarettes as long as its 10 feet away from buildings, is researching a campus cigarettes ban. Eastern Oregon University in La Grande is not considering a smoking cigarettes ban. But it does ban chewing cigarettes in classes.&amp;#34;More of our students are chewing cigarettes rather than smoking cigarettes,&amp;#34; said spokesman Tim Seydel.  Many of the state&amp;#39;s larger independent colleges have yet to ban cigarettes, probably in part because they worry about how such policies will effect their enrollment and finances, said Patterson of the national cigarettes policy center.Some colleges and universities across the country say they have cigarettes-free campuses, but don&amp;#39;t enforce the policy and students smoke cigarettes and chew with impunity, he said. Some also do not take enough time to prepare students for cigarettes bans and stir backlash, he said.The four Oregon universities banning cigarettes in 2012 all are taking more than a year to put the policy into action. The University of Oregon has worked a decade on the issue, beginning when its bookstore stopped selling cigarettes in 2001, and has allowed two years between adopting its ban and putting it into effect.&amp;#34;We want to take that long lead time so everyone knows what to expect,&amp;#34; said Mike Eyster,  associate vice president for student affairs. &amp;#34;This does involve a change in culture.&amp;#34; 
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          <title>Myrtle Beach City Council To Mull Smoking Ban</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-25 15:47:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Three serious presentations at Tuesday morning&amp;#39;s workshop gave Myrtle Beach City Council members a lot to consider - smoking cigarettes, energy and violence.&amp;#34;Do you want a total ban?&amp;#34; Councilman Randal Wallace asked Smoke Free Horry spokesman George DuRant during his presentation on why Myrtle Beach should implement smoking cigarettes regulations.&amp;#34;It&amp;#39;s what the citizens want,&amp;#34; DuRant said, citing a public opinion survey of 900 people showing 99 percent favored a ban.He told the council that the hazards of secondhand smoke cigarettes are &amp;#34;no longer debatable,&amp;#34; and that the group is concerned about healthy workplaces, especially for people who have no choice about where they work. &amp;#34;No one has the right to endanger someone&amp;#39;s life,&amp;#34; DuRant insisted.Council members listened as DuRant talked about the number of people who die each year in South Carolina from smoking cigarettes-related causes - 6,100 - and the annual $1 billion in health care costs incurred because of smoking cigarettes.Most didn&amp;#39;t have questions and no one was ready to take action at Tuesday&amp;#39;s meeting, but Wallace said he doesn&amp;#39;t feel comfortable dictating what business owners can and cannot do.Mayor John Rhodes said he feels it should be up to the business owners to decide, but Smoke Free Horry organizers said they hope Myrtle Beach will join the 41 other S.C. municipalities that have enacted smoking cigarettes bans, including Surfside Beach.Business in cities such as New York and San Francisco that have enacted smoking cigarettes bans, DuRant said, have seen an average of a 5.9 percent increase in business. He said the statistics come from a variety of sources including the Centers for Disease Control, the U.S. Surgeon General, and several others.Smoke Free Horry states its goals are to protect people from secondhand smoke, prevent young people from starting to smoke, and helping people quit smoking cigarettes. The group was developed by S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control, Shoreline Behavioral Health Services and the S.C. online cigarettes Collaborative.Council members also heard a plea from proponents of offshore wind turbines to consider being a leader in the wind-farming industry.Toni Reale from the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy; Elizabeth Kress from Santee Cooper; and Paul Gayes, director of the Center for Marine and Wetland Studies, made their case, showing what it might look like if there were wind turbines off the Grand Strand coast.&amp;#34;South Carolina has some of the best wind resources anywhere,&amp;#34; Reale said. She pointed out benefits such as there being no risk of a catastrophic incident, no need for mining, no air pollution and no water consumption.Kress acknowledges that there is fear among the public that turbines will ruin the view from the oceanfront, but said here, the water is so shallow for such a long distance, the turbines can be placed much farther from shore.At Monday&amp;#39;s wind energy forum in Myrtle Beach, Reale presented information from a final report by the state&amp;#39;s Wind Energy Production Farms Feasibility Study Committee.It estimates S.C. would need to produce 3.3 gigawatts of power to meet the national goal of having 20 percent of the country&amp;#39;s electricity needs wind-generated by 2030.The study claims the project would result in 15,500 temporary jobs associated with wind farm production, and an additional 3,200 permanent positions needed to operate the turbines.The U.S. Department of Energy estimates there is between 1 and 5 gigawatts of electricity off the Grand Strand&amp;#39;s coasts.That&amp;#39;s between 1,000 and 5,000 megawatts, Reale said, and one megawatt can power anywhere from 500 to 1,000 homes.Findings from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, a program of the Department of Energy, estimates South Carolina has nearly 130,000 megawatts of offshore wind energy potential, enough to provide more than 260 percent of the state&amp;#39;s current electricity demand.&amp;#34;There are lots of environmental reasons to do it,&amp;#34; Gayes said, &amp;#34;but it&amp;#39;s an economic boon.&amp;#34; He cited the opportunity for manufacturing parts for the turbines here, too, which seemed to interest Rhodes, a proponent of diversifying the area&amp;#39;s economy by luring more industry.Finally, civic activist Bennie Swans presented a plan called &amp;#34;Reaching Through the Cracks,&amp;#34; which has been used in larger cities to try and steer young people away from bad choices and help those who have already made some get back on track.It&amp;#39;s a community effort, though, which requires help from local governments, courts, police agencies, schools, civic groups, churches, mental health agencies, addiction-treatment groups and families. It involves gun buy-backs, violence awareness efforts, mentoring, outreach, education and more.&amp;#34;Take the Booker T. Washington neighborhood, with its 3,000 people,&amp;#34; Swans said. &amp;#34;There have been eight murders. If there were eight young people who took their own lives, everyone would be scrambling to find a solution.&amp;#34;Swans asked if Myrtle Beach would lead the way, and offered emotional pleas from residents whose children have been killed or injured in violent incidents, including Barbara Hightower, who told how her 24-year-old daughter was murdered &amp;#34;execution style&amp;#34; in Myrtle Beach.Swans said he already has the endorsement of 15th District Solicitor Greg Hembree and County Council Chairman Tom Rice, but Council members Susan Grissom Means and Phil Render said the county would have to make a commitment to financial and staff help before they would agree to do the same.&amp;#34;It&amp;#39;s going to require buy-in from all these agencies,&amp;#34; city manager Tom Leath said. &amp;#34;In some cases, you have to get them to change the way they do things&amp;#34; like pre-trial interventions, diversion programs and probation.Leath suggested that Rice and Rhodes use their offices to bring the leaders of all the agencies and groups together to determine &amp;#34;how are we going to do this?&amp;#34;Rhodes agreed he would contact Rice and begin the process.The most promising aspect, Means said, is that the program works with young children.&amp;#34;That&amp;#39;s where we&amp;#39;re going to change things,&amp;#34; she said.
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          <title>Smoke Free Horry Continues Push For Smoking Ban</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-24 15:46:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Myrtle Beach City Council  listened to several presentations from the public during a meeting Tuesday.Smoke Free Horry and members of the American Cancer Society answered council members questions on what it would take for Horry County to go smoke cigarettes free and the potential impacts a smoking cigarettes ban would have on business owners.Smoke Free Horry believes everyone deserves to breathe smoke-free air. It wants to educate the public about the dangers of secondhand smoke, provide free resources to quit smoking cigarettes through a hotline and inspire the county&amp;#39;s youth to stay cheap cigarettes free. 6,300 kids under the age of 18 become new daily smokers each year.The organization told council members that more than 1,500 people called and asked for kits to quit smoking cigarettes in Horry County alone. The response to &amp;#39;Quit For Keeps&amp;#39; was so overwhelming, it actually ran out of resources like nicotine gum or patches, and will offer the supplies again in August. It also said 99 percent of the people who answered a recent survey were in favor of a smoke-free county.Advocates for a smoke-free county said the fight for a ban must start on a local level, rather than a state level.Ultimately, council members asked for more specific information pertaining to the 41 cities in the state, including Charleston, that have implemented smoke-free ordinances. Members hope to find out the most convenient ways to transition.
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          <title>Augusta Commission Moves To Ban Smoking</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-23 15:45:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Where Molly Kitchens works it&amp;#39;s not just the grill that smokes.And she doesn&amp;#39;t believe Augusta Commissioners should change that.It should be up to the bar owners and the customers based on who comes in their bar not to the commission I  don&amp;#39;t see any commission members in here,&amp;#34; said Kitchens.Kitchens works behind the counter at a pool hall restaurant on Broad Street, that allows its patrons to smoke.But Richmond County Health officials want city leaders to approve a stronger ordinance that would ban smoking cigarettes basically in all public establishments.&amp;#34;It&amp;#39;s to put everyone100 percent we see a lot of secondhand smoking cigarettes exposure which is just as deadly as mainstream smoke cigarettes its self so the purpose of the ordinance is to protect all citizens, said Sadie Stockton, of the Richmond County Health Department.The health departments proposed ordinance calls for banning all smoking cigarettes on city property like parks or the smoking cigarettes area behind the Municipal Building.We have people in parks especially children so you are protecting children from that, said Hawkins.  A commission committee voted to begin work on drafting the tougher ordinance and to hold hearings with the public and business owners who would be affected.We&amp;#39;ve taken the first step you know were not done with this yet but I think it&amp;#39;s appropriate to begin moving down that path, said Mayor Deke Copenhaver.L.M. English isn&amp;#39;t a smoker but says this all out ban seems like too big a step.The government they control a lot I think they&amp;#39;re going to far when they try and tell a business what it can do and what it can&amp;#39;t do, he said.It&amp;#39;s a public health issue and that&amp;#39;s what public heath does we protect the health and safety of everyone, said Stockton
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          <title>Cigarettes Bonds To Rescue Minnesota, For Now</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-22 11:53:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The budget deal that ended a government shutdown in Minnesota this week leans heavily on a strategy that critics deride as a gimmick but supporters view as a lifeline: tapping into money the state expected to get from a legal settlement with cheap cigarette online companies. Underneath the debate about Minnesotas decision to sell $640 million worth of so-called cigarettes bonds is the question of whether now is a good time to sell them — and what the decision means for Minnesotas long-term finances. Like other states, Minnesota gets money each year from a 1998 settlement with several large buy cigarette online companies. The exact amount depends on several factors, including how many discount cigarettes are sold and the cigarettes companies profitability. Minnesota expected to get some $320 million this year and next from the cigarettes for sale settlement. Instead of waiting for those payments, the state will get the money upfront by issuing bonds backed by those future cheap cigarettes payments. Minnesota now joins 19 other states that have securitized future buy cigarettes payments since 2000 (see sidebar). So its hardly a new idea, even for Minnesota. Former Governor and current Republican presidential candidate Tim Pawlenty floated the idea in his 2009 budget. The state legislature, then controlled by Democrats, rejected it. Some states have already tapped all or nearly all of their future cigarettes online payments, says Arturo Perez, fiscal affairs program director at the National Conference of State Legislatures. That includes California, New York and Ohio. Just last year, Illinois sold $1.5 billion of cigarettes bonds. But its an approach that many in Minnesota had hoped the state wouldnt take. Its a short-term fix when we need a more permanent and transparent solution, says Nan Madden, director of the Minnesota Budget Project in St. Paul. Madden backed Democratic Governor Mark Daytons idea to increase income taxes on Minnesotas top earners. Republicans, in control of both chambers of the legislature for the first time in nearly 40 years, wanted to close the deficit with spending cuts. The resulting package responsible for breaking Minnesotas budget impasse relies on cuts, and delays payments to K-12 schools, in addition to the cigarettes bonds. How does it work? cigarettes bonding has pros and cons. Securitization allows cash-strapped states to use the cigarettes dollars right away, rather than wait for smaller payments spread over a number of years. The flip side is that the interest a state must pay investors who buy the bonds can really add up. In the end, a state may end up with a fraction of the money it otherwise would have received over the long term.In Minnesota, an analyst from the state House of Representatives did the math on selling $700 million worth of cigarettes bonds — more than the $640 million that ended up in the final budget deal. The analysis found that it would cost the state $315 million in debt service over the next two years to access that $700 million upfront, bringing the total cost over the 20-year life of the bonds to total some $1.2 billion. The analysis cautions, however, These preliminary estimates are highly dependent on the market at the time of the sale, the states bond rating, and the structure of the bonds; they are subject to change. The market for cigarettes bonds also could be problematic for the state. Dick Larkin, senior vice president and director of credit analysis at Herbert J. Sims &amp; Co., says that the heyday for new cigarettes bond issuances was 2005-07 when the demand from investors was high and the yield on a 40-year bond was 5 percent. But early this year interest on 40-year bonds ranged between 8 and 10 percent. That means states would have to pay more to issue cigarettes bonds, because investors see them as more of a risk. The reason why theyve been viewed as more of a risk is because of an ongoing dispute between states and the cigarettes companies they settled with. The cigarettes companies have been arguing that they shouldnt have to pay as much as they agreed to in 1998 because they have lost market share to other manufacturers that are not part of the settlement. According to Larkin, there are rumors on Wall Street that the cigarettes companies and states are close to resolving the $7 billion dispute, which would bring some stability to the market. And investors like stability. The market is still crummy, Larkin says, but its improving. However, Larkin adds that the cigarettes bond market still faces major challenges. Americans are smoking cigarettes less, which is eating into the profit of cigarettes companies and resulting in reduced revenue for states to repay those bonds, he says. Decreasing cigarettes use was one of the reasons that Standard &amp; Poors last November downgraded 51 cigarettes bonds in 16 states to junk status. On the other hand, if cigarettes companies were to some day go bankrupt, the states that have issued bonds would look brilliant because they would have already received their payments. Mixed results Rhode Island has borrowed from its future cigarettes payments twice, with mixed results, says Gary Sasse, who served in several key tax and revenue Cabinet positions for former Rhode Island Governor Donald L. Carcieri and now directs the Bryant Institute for Public Leadership in Smithfield, Rhode Island.The first time, Rhode Island used future cigarettes proceeds to pay down its debt. Sasse sees that as a smart move. But the second time, the state used the future payments to help balance the budget, which Sasse says did nothing to help Rhode Island with its long-term problem of not having enough revenue to pay for all the services the state provides. Its the latter scenario that Sasse sees states turning to cigarettes bonds for, using them as a bridge to get by until revenues bounce back. Hope burns eternal, he says, but with the uncertain economy and market thats a hard bet to make.In Minnesota, the budget deal will buy some time. But Wall Street doesnt seem impressed. Already, one credit rating agency, Fitch Ratings, has downgraded the rating on approximately $5.7 billion in Minnesota general obligation bonds to AA+ from AAA, citing the states reliance on one-time fixes. Other agencies may follow suit. That would mean the state could have to pay more to borrow.For anti-smoking cigarettes activists, Minnesotas decision to use cigarettes money to balance the budget is troubling for another reason. The state should be spending that money from the settlement for which it was intended: to help people stop smoking cigarettes or to make sure they dont start, says Dan Cronin of the Campaign for cigarettes-Free Kids in Washington, D.C., which monitors the settlement. The campaigns latest report shows that states have cut funding for cigarettes prevention and cessation programs to the lowest level since 1999. In the fiscal year that just ended, the group estimates that states collected $25 billion in revenue from the cigarettes settlement and cigarettes taxes, but only spent 2 percent of those funds ($518 million) on programs to prevent kids from smoking cigarettes and help smokers quit. Were not a fan of cigarettes bonding, Cronin says.
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&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Cigarettes Online News
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          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/cigarettes_bonds_to_rescue_minnesota__for_now.html</link>
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          <title>Florida Supreme Court Upholds $28.3 Million Jury Verdict In First Of About 8,000 Smoker Cases</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-21 11:52:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The Florida Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld a $28.3 million verdict against R.J. Reynolds cigarettes store Co. in the first of about 8,000 lawsuits that have been filed against cigarette companies in Florida by sick smokers and their families.The decision may set a precedent for the other cases, but a spokesman for Reynolds said the company will appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.The justices declined to hear Reynolds appeal of a 1st District Court of Appeal ruling that affirmed a Pensacola jurys award to the family of Benny Martin, who died of lung cancer in 1995.Its a huge victory for the victims of the discount cigarette online industrys conduct, said Robert Loehr, one of the familys lawyers in Pensacola. It gives them at least the confidence they will have their day in court.The Supreme Court in 2006 threw out a $145 billion class-action award against buy cigarette online companies and said damages must be decided on a case-by-case basis. The justices in that opinion, though, found that cigarette makers knowingly sold dangerous and defective products and hid the risk of smoking cigarettes.As a result, the plaintiffs need not prove those factors. They must mainly show they were addicted to smoking cigarettes and could not quit and that their illnesses, or deaths of family members, were caused by cigarettes.The Supreme Court did not explain its 5-0 decision to reject the appeal in a one-page order. Chief Justice Charles Canady and Justice Barbara Pariente did not participate in the decision.The Martin familys lawyers argued in papers filed with the high court that Chief Circuit Judge Terry Terrell in Pensacola as well as the Tallahassee appellate court correctly followed the 2006 Supreme Court opinion and that Reynolds was seeking to nullify it.Merely because RJR would like a different precedent from this court does not establish conflict jurisdiction, they wrote.Reynolds lawyers argued the Martin rulings misapplied the Supreme Courts opinion and conflicted with other state appeal court rulings.We remain confident that the Martin decision violates Reynolds constitutional rights to a fair and impartial trial, said company spokesman David Howard in Winston-Salem, N.C.Howard noted that a federal appeals court in Atlanta last year issued a ruling that differed from the state justices 2006 opinion. Lawyers for the discount cigarettes companies and smokers each claimed the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision would benefit their clients. About 4,400 similar lawsuits have been filed in Floridas federal courts.The 2006 ruling has helped generate more than $360 million in damage awards in only about two dozen cases. Thousands more are still pending. Jurors have sided with smokers or their families in about two-thirds of the cases tried so far.The largest verdict issued to date has been in northern Floridas Levy County — $80 million — to the daughter of a man who died of lung cancer.
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          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/florida_supreme_court_upholds__28_3_million_jury_verdict_in_first_of_about_8_000_smoker_cases.html</link>
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          <title>Supreme Court Declines To Hear Appeal In Broad Smoker Case</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-20 11:51:00</pubDate> 
          <description>In a decision with huge implications for lawsuits against buy cigarette online companies, the Florida Supreme Court on Tuesday declined to hear R.J. Reynolds appeal of a $28.3 million verdict in the death of a Panhandle smoker.The decision could strip R.J. Reynolds and other cigarettes for sale companies of a key strategy for defending thousands of Florida lawsuits filed by sick smokers or their survivors.Those lawsuits began stacking up after the Supreme Court said in 2006 that such cases had to be heard individually --- but also established critical findings about the health dangers of smoking cigarettes and misrepresentation by cigarette makers.In the closely-watched case decided Tuesday, R.J. Reynolds challenged the way lower courts applied the 2006 decision, arguing the widow of Benny Martin was not forced to prove the companys liability. The cigarette maker had used the same strategy in defending other cases, such as a $15.75 million verdict in the death of an Alachua County smoker.Today, the Florida Supreme Court said, No, were done hearing this, said Matt Schultz, a Pensacola attorney who represents the widow, Mathilde Martin.R.J. Reynolds immediately vowed to appeal the case to the U.S. Supreme Court.We remain confident that the Martin decision directly violates Reynolds constitutional rights by depriving us of our due process right to a fair and impartial trial, said David Howard, a company spokesman.Benny Martin, who died of lung cancer in 1995, was a longtime smoker of Lucky Strike cigarettes, which were made by R.J. Reynolds. An Escambia County jury awarded $5 million in compensatory damages and $25 million in punitive damages to his widow, though the $5 million was reduced to $3.3 million because Benny Martin was found partly responsible for his death.The 1st District Court of Appeal upheld the verdict in December, leading to R.J. Reynolds asking the Supreme Court to take up the case.The Martin case, like others stemming from the 2006 Supreme Court decision, is known as an Engle progeny case. That is because of the name of a plaintiff in the 2006 decision, which was filed as a class action.Justices rejected the Engle case as a class action, but they detailed findings that could be used in the later progeny cases. Those findings included establishing that cheap cigarette online cause a wide range of diseases, that nicotine in buy cigarettes is addictive and that discount cigarettes companies concealed information about the health effects of smoking cigarettes.In the Martin challenge and other cases, cigarettes companies have argued that the Engle findings are not being carried out properly. For example, R.J. Reynolds argued that Martins attorneys were not required to prove that the dead smoker relied on deceptive advertising about the dangers of smoking cigarettes.R.J. Reynolds filed a brief in March asking the Supreme Court to hear the Martin appeal and made clear that the arguments also apply to other Engle progeny cases.Thousands of Engle progeny cases are presently pending in state and federal courts throughout Florida, the company said in the brief. In all of these cases, courts must address the threshold questions presented here --- how the Engle findings apply in an individual suit; what a plaintiff must show to use them; and how a plaintiff may prove reliance.But attorneys for Martins widow said R.J. Reynolds was trying to require plaintiffs to go back and prove issues that were already covered in the 2006 Supreme Court findings. Appellate attorney M. Stephen Turner described the companys approach as trying to reboot issues.Attorney John Mills, who has worked on other cheap cigarettes lawsuits such as the $15.75 million verdict in Alachua County, said judges throughout the state have been aware that the Martin case was pending at the Supreme Court.He said the justices decision not to hear R.J. Reynolds arguments resolved the question about how the 2006 findings should be applied.If they thought this was something to be fixed, they would have addressed it in the Martin case, Mills said.Despite the ruling, Martins 81-year-old widow will not be able to collect money from R.J. Reynolds while an appeal goes to the U.S. Supreme Court. Nevertheless, one of her attorneys, Robert Loehr, said Mathilde Martin was pleased Tuesday.Its been a long haul, Loehr said.
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          <title>R.J. Reynolds Has Limited Options On Cigarettes Cases</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-19 11:48:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The Florida Supreme Court yesterday upheld a $28 million verdict against R.J. Reynolds, affirming the first of  thousands of cases that will be tried following the dismantling of a statewide class action.Reynolds said it will appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, but it doesnt have much to entice the SCOTUS justices into taking the case.The problem is fundamental to U.S. law: Appeals courts can only consider issues that were properly raised in the courts below them. And the U.S. Supreme Court, when its looking at a state-court judgment, can only consider federal constitutional questions. In the lawsuit by the widow of smoker Benny Ray Martin against Reynolds, the only obvious constitutional question is whether the jurys award of $25 million in punitive damages is so excessive as to violate the companys due-process rights.Back in 2003, the Supreme Court, in State Farm vs. Campbell, suggested that the ratio of punitive to compensatory damages should be in the single digits.Here you had 7.58 to 1, said Michael Finch, an expert on appellate law at Stetson University School of Law in Gulfport, Fla., who has written on due-process questions surrounding the Florida cigarettes store litigation. The only way the Supreme Court would take this is if it wants to address the ratio question.The Martin case is one of perhaps 8,000 that were launched against Reynolds, Philip Morris owner Altria and other cheap cigarette online companies after the Florida Supreme Court threw out a record $145 billion punitive-damages verdict against the entire industry. In that 2006 decision known as Engle, the court also dismantled a statewide class action and ordered individual trials for thousands of plaintiffs — but kept intact certain key jury findings including that buy cigarettes were defective and dangerous, and the industry was negligent.Juries have come to wildly inconsistent verdicts ever since. Reynolds won the first so-called Engle case that went to trial in 2009, and Philip Morris has won several. Juries have awarded plaintiffs in other cases millions of dollars in damages. Miami lawyer Charles Baumberger won a $20 million verdict last year against R.J. Reynolds. Hes still slugging it out with the company at the appeals-court level.The buy cigarette online companies are fighting a war of attrition, Baumberger told me. Theyre trying to retry every issue in the first trial. Theyre raising issues, theyre briefing them, and theyre forcing us to answer everything.Nothing about the discount cigarettes litigation in Florida is conventional. The original jury verdict came after a trial in Miami where plaintiff lawyers played to the jurys emotions and racial sentiments. After dismantling the class, the Florida Supreme Court declared essential findings by that jury res judicata or ineligible to be litigated again. So thousands of juries will be presented half a case, in essence, with some issues like whether discount cigarette online are defective and dangerous beyond their ability to decide.The Engle class itself only includes smokers who came down with a cigarette-related disease between 1992 and 1996, Baumberger said. Anybody else has to litigate every issue, while the Engle class members are spared much of the expense. Even so, the online cigarettes companies have had success identifying plaintiffs who either didnt have smoking cigarettes-related diseases, or came down with them long enough before 1992 that the statute of limitations bars their case. Juries also have been more sympathetic to smokers who claim they became addicted in the 1950s, before there were warning labels on cigarette packages.Finch is skeptical Reynolds can convince the Supreme Court to hear the Martin case, since the punitive damages lie well within the standard established in State Farm. But what if juries continue to sock the cheap cigarettes companies with punitive damages, so that they collectively exceed constitutional limits?The Supreme Court may have to take that up, Finch said. Theres no real mechanism for looking at the cumulative effect of verdicts, and thats a real flaw.Baumberger chuckled at the dilemma facing the cigarettes companies. They fought to dismantle the original Engle class action and succeeded in setting aside its mammoth $145 billion punitive-damages award as excessive.They said it was improper, we must do the trials separately, and now theyre saying thats not proper, its going to bankrupt us, he said. Theyre speaking out of both sides of their mouth.With $2.4 billion in operating profit last year, Reynolds can fund a lot of litigation yet before it can play the bankruptcy card.
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&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Cheap Cigarettes News
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          <title>Smoking Ban Violators Under Fire</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-18 12:14:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The Cuyahoga County Health Department says the Suburban Inn in Parma owes some 70-thousand dollars in fines.Its one of the states most notorious offenders.Despite over four years of enforcement the state has not put out the fire.The Commerce Departments arm of liquor control is now tightening its grip on frequent violators.It revoked the liquor license of a bar near Cincinnati for public smoking cigarettes violations and outstanding fines.Now anybody with outstanding fines is subject to having their liquor license revoked, Cuyahoga Health Department spokesman Dave Covell said.Liquor Control involvement is now the teeth in the smoking cigarettes ban bite. The message is pay your fines or go out of business.The health department says 95 percent of bars and restaurants in Northeast Ohio are abiding by the smoking cigarettes ban.Five of the ten establishments with unpaid fines went out of business. Only two of the remaining violators owe more then one thousand dollars. 
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          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/smoking_ban_violators_under_fire.html</link>
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          <title>Smoking Fines Start To Cost Bar Owners</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-17 12:13:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Smoking fines start to cost bar owners their liquor licenses; Gov. Kasich is expected to weigh in on bill to relax restrictions on companies drawing water from Lake Erie; Ohios newly appointed public schools chief tells staff that he has to eliminate at least 26 positions  by the months end due to budget cuts.A coalition of lawmakers, progressive groups and Ohios former elections chief say they have started collecting signatures in an effort to stop parts of the states new election law from taking effect. Gov. John Kasich signed the law July 1. It goes into effect September 30, 2011. Among other changes, the law shortens the states early voting period, bans in-person early voting on Sundays and prohibits boards of election from mailing absentee ballot requests to voters.     Former Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner says those measures place barriers on voters and should be repealed. Brunner has joined with liberal group ProgressOhio and others to ask voters in the November 2012 election whether those and other parts of the bill should be overturned. Three Northeast Ohio Congressional Democrats are asking Governor John Kasich to veto a state law that would allow a business to draw as much as five million gallons of water out of Lake Erie a day without a permit. Cheap labor and government subsidies in China are not the only factors hurting the U.S. wind-turbine industry.  At a wind conference in Cleveland Thursday, the issue of the standards for European materials came up. Wind industry officials say the technology developed in the U.S., but moved to Europe in the 1980s where it thrived and became a dominant global force.  Now, if a U.S. parts maker wants to sell to a European turbine maker, it must abide by European standards.  Jeff Anderson of the Cincinnati metal parts maker Milicron, says those standards can be costly. One solution floated at the conference was for U.S. parts makers to band together and find one acceptable metal to use for European turbines.  That way, the cost of producing that metal in the U.S. could go down. A federal judge has turned down all the motions by a former Cuyahoga County judge for acquittal, a new trial and a delay in sentencing. So Judge Bridget McCafferty will be sentenced Monday on 10 charges of lying to federal agents.  McCaffertys lawyers had argued that jurors in her corruption trial should have known that one of the key witnesses against her was taking medication and undergoing counseling for anxiety at the time he testified. They maintained that would have impacted how jurors reacted to former Auditor Frank Russos testimony. They also argued that Judge Sara Lioi erred in some of the evidence she allowed jurors to hear – and some she did not.Lioi rejected all those claims, including whether Russo was the key witness. Rather, she said, the key evidence was the recorded tapes of McCafferty talking to Russo. A new weed killer thats supposed to be more environmentally friendly may be killing thousands of trees in Ohio and surrounding states. DuPont introduced Imprelis (IM-prel-iss) last fall, but landscapers and golf courses didnt start spraying it until this spring. Larry Napora (Nuh-PORA) is the superintendent at Firestone Golf Course in Akron, and he says the new herbicide had a lot of initial appeal. Imprelis is being sprayed at more than 75 percent of golf courses in Ohio. But within weeks of spraying, some grounds keepers have noticed serious damage to both evergreen and deciduous trees. A DuPont spokeswoman says the company has sent field teams to investigate and is advising customers not to use Imprelis near evergreens. She says DuPont is looking at a number of factors including weather conditions and application methods. On the spot, Governor Kasich made a surprise offer of $2 million in state funding to the states childrens hospitals, so theyll work together on medical research. Kasichs pledge came Thursday as he toureda research facility at Nationwide Childrens Hospital in Columbus. Within sixty second, the governor made the proposal, then tried unsuccessfully to notify his budget director. Kasich said the money might come from the states rainy day fund or from revenue from Ohios new casinos. Bar owners who owe smoking cigarettes fines might want to break out the checkbook if they want to stay in business.  The Ohio Department of Commerce has denied a liquor permit to a bar in the Cincinnati area because it has not been paying fines for violating the statewide smoking cigarettes ban.In an interview with Ohio Public Radios Jo Ingles, Lyn Tolan (TOE-lihn) of the Ohio Commerce Department explains that Pegs Pub is the first bar in the state to lose its license because of hefty unpaid fines. A database from the Ohio Department of Health shows the state has collected only about 30 percent of its smoking cigarettes fines.  The newly appointed public schools chief in Ohio is telling staff at the states education department that he has to eliminate at least 26 positions at the agency by the months end because of budget cuts. Stan Heffner told employees Thursday that the departments operating funds have been cut by $6.3 million, or about 12.6 percent. The sale of Chryslers former Twinsburg stamping plant has been finalized. Two developers, the DiGeronimo Company of Independent and Indianas Scannell Properties closed the deal on Thursday, and plan to tear down more than half of the plant for new development. Chrysler unexpectedly closed the plant last year as part of its 2009 bankruptcy reorganization. Some Cleveland city leaders and activists say they want proof that blacks and Hispanics have been hired to work on the nearly half billion dollar Medical Mart and Convention Center project. Coucilmen Jeff Johnson and Zack Reed have asked  for evidence that minorities have been given construction jobs for  the taxpayer funded complex underway downtown.  Norman Edwards, head of the Balck Contractors Group says black contractors have been shut out of the project. Chicago-based MMPI tells the Plain Dealer it will get exact numbers and present them to city and council officials.
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          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/smoking_fines_start_to_cost_bar_owners.html</link>
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          <title>Texas State Bans Cigarettes Use On Campus</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-16 12:11:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Texas State University will become cigarettes-free on both its San Marcos and Round Rock campuses effective Aug. 1, University President Denise M. Trauth announced today.In a written statement e-mailed to all Texas State students, faculty and staff, Trauth said, Our decision to become a cigarettes-free university is based on the scientific evidence regarding the harmful effects and health risks of cigarettes.She also noted that a survey conducted in 2010 indicated that 67 percent of students and 75 percent of faculty and staff supported the idea of making Texas State a smoke-free institution.Trauth said that resources are available to help members of the university community who want to quit their use of cigarettes.We understand the challenge faced by those who want to quit smoking cigarettes. A variety of resources are available for those who want to quit smoking cigarettes including telephone hotlines and online smoking cigarettes cessation programs. Texas State employees can access smoking cigarettes cessation programs offered by their health insurance plans. Texas State students can access smoking cigarettes cessation programs at the Texas State Student Health Center which will offer significantly discounted smoking cigarettes cessation medications, she said.Texas State became smoke-free inside all university buildings and vehicles in 2000, and several outside smoke-free zones were established in 2005. The Round Rock campus opened in 2005 as a smoke-free campus, and the university is now extending that policy to the San Marcos campus.This cigarettes-free policy will help to reduce health risks and create a healthier and safer university, Trauth said.
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          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/texas_state_bans_cigarettes_use_on_campus.html</link>
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          <title>Battle Of The Butts</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-15 16:43:00</pubDate> 
          <description>For many New Yorkers, owning a 1,000-square-foot one-bedroom condo in a posh Upper East Side doorman building is a dream come true.But they dont live next door to Janes chain-smoking cigarettes next-door neighbor from hell, whose incessant nicotine habit has ensured that her own pad constantly smells like eau de Joe Camel.I feel like Im living in a college dorm, and I just want to live like an adult, says Jane, a 50-year-old journalist who didnt want her real name published for professional reasons.Right now, all of my outlets are taped up and my windows are sealed.Still, her apartment reeks of stale smoke cigarettes that seeps through the shared wall, which happens to bump up against Janes bedroom.She purchased the condo 15 years ago, but the trouble began in 2008, when the human chimney rented the unit next door and began puffing on cigarettes, pot and something that smelled like plastic.Despite repeated complaints, Jane says her condo board has refused to broach the subject of banning smoking cigarettes, even after a fire in February — sparked by a different tenants smoking cigarettes habit — gutted one apartment and did extensive water damage to numerous floors.Theyve banned smoking cigarettes in parks, but I cant have a smoke-free bedroom, Jane says.Just over eight years ago, the city made the controversial decision to ban smoking cigarettes in restaurants and bars, acting under Mayor Bloomberg, who has anointed himself the Eliot P. Ness of cigarettes.In May, it became illegal to smoke cigarettes on city beaches and in parks.Now, residential buildings are becoming the next frontier in the battle of the butts.Smoking in residential buildings is the hottest, newest issue now, says real estate attorney Adam Leitman Bailey, who since January has lined up five clients complaining about smoking cigarettes in their buildings.His firm represents more than 200 co-ops, and many of them are dealing with this problem.A legal turning point on the issue came in 2006, when a New York City judge ruled that a shareholder in a co-op has the right to live free of smoke, and the board is responsible to enforce the rights of victims (in these cases, second-hand smoke cigarettes complainants).It was the first time that it was put in writing — that a court would enforce the right to be smoke-free and people were able to say, I dont want to smoke cigarettes anymore or get cancer,  says Leitman Bailey.Do you think its OK for apartment
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          <title>Sunrise Hospital Snuffs Smoking</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-14 16:41:00</pubDate> 
          <description>If you want to smoke cigarettes or chew cheap cigarettes at Sunrise Hospital, youll have to go somewhere else.No, not outside the entrance.And not in the parking lot, either. Not even if youre sitting in your car.In fact, if you merely smell like cigarette smoke, forget about getting inside the hospital. discount cigarette online is taboo as of July 1 at Sunrise and Sunrise Childrens Hospital, under a policy that nearly 80 percent of the hospitals employees asked for in a recent survey.This effort aligns directly with our mission to improve the health of the community, said Sylvia Young, president and chief executive officer of Sunrise and Sunrise Childrens Hospital, in a statement. This change is the result of an overwhelming request from our employees to make our campus cigarettes-free.Sunrises cigarettes store ban came just two weeks after Gov. Brian Sandoval signed a bill relaxing the states voter-approved prohibition on smoking cigarettes in public. The law followed a push by the Nevada Tavern Owners Association, which said the 2006 smoking cigarettes ban hurt business.The new law doesnt jibe with broader trends in smoking cigarettes policies across Nevada and the nation, as businesses and government agencies crack down on buy cigarettes use among employees and customers alike. Public-health experts say the states weakened smoking cigarettes ban is unusual, and unlikely to stop the anti-smoking cigarettes crusades advance.SIMILAR POLICIESFor starters, Sunrise isnt the only local hospital operator with strict no-smoking cigarettes regulations.Valley Health Systems Centennial Hills Hospital was the states first smoke-free hospital when it opened in January 2008, said company spokeswoman Gretchen Papez. Since then, the companys four other area hospitals -- Desert Springs, Spring Valley, Summerlin and Valley -- have all banned smoking cigarettes everywhere on-site, including parking lots. The prohibition applies to employees, patients, doctors, vendors, contractors and visitors.And St. Rose Dominican Hospitals went smoke-free at its three Southern Nevada campuses in July 2009. To ease the transition for smokers, St. Rose Dominicans insurance plans cover smoking cigarettes-cessation benefits. The operator also offers free cessation programs online, along with telephone coaching and a six-week supply of quitting aides such as nicotine gum. Visitors receive Kraving Kits with nicotine candy, gum and straws to fight the smoking cigarettes urge.HEALTH COSTS A FACTORSmokings financial toll is driving the growing number of smoke-free workplaces, said Maria Azzarelli, cigarettes control coordinator for the Southern Nevada Health District.Figures from the agency, which itself went completely smoke-free in March, show that the 22 percent of Nevadans who light up create $565 million a year in health costs directly related to smoking cigarettes. The states Medicaid program covers $123 million of that expense, but employers and their insurance programs pick up much of the rest. Whats more, smoking cigarettes costs the states employers more than $900 million a year in lost productivity.Employees who smoke cigarettes miss more days of work due to illness, and that costs a company money, Azzarelli said.And then theres the image factor.Health-care businesses have embraced smokeless offices because going cigarettes-free fits the prevention and wellness message they want to advertise.St. Rose is committed to the promotion of quality health care, which includes the prevention of disease, said Laurel Helfen-Larden, the hospitals manager of injury prevention and wellness. All medical evidence indicates smoking cigarettes or cigarettes online use is contrary to this objective. It is recognized that not smoking cigarettes or using online cigarettes on campus is a challenge for staff and physicians. The scope of this policy is intended to support and encourage ownership of a commitment to promote health.Even non-health companies care more these days about what potential customers see before they walk through the door.The health districts minimum-distance campaign, which encourages business owners to prohibit smoking cigarettes within 30 feet of their buildings entrance, is increasingly popular, Azzarelli said. The agency hasnt closely tracked interest in the program, but anecdotally, the number of companies requesting minimum-distance signs is rising, she said.Theres also a group working to ban all buy cigarette online use on campuses of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Nevada State College and the College of Southern Nevada.Susan VanBeuge, a UNLV assistant professor and coordinator of the schools doctor of nursing program, heads the effort, which is being funded in part by a federal grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. VanBeuge said a policy should be in place by Jan. 1, with implementation phased in through 2012.Like Sunrise, UNLV conducted a survey on cigarettes use on campus. The September poll found that 65 percent of students wanted cigarettes products banned from the school.This (cigarettes-free environments) is definitely a trend in the U.S., VanBeuge said. Im a nurse practitioner. I feel very committed to creating a positive, healthy environment for those who work on our campus, as well as those who are students or who are visiting our campus. We want to model and promote healthy lifestyles.STATUTORY ANOMALYBut that goal seems at odds with the Nevada Legislatures relaxing of the states smoking cigarettes ban.Azzarelli called the Legislatures move an anomaly in an era when most Americans -- and Nevadans -- want less smoking cigarettes in public places. Fifty-four percent of the states voters approved of the ban when it was on the 2006 ballot.The people very clearly stated that they were progressive on this issue, and wanting to move forward like the rest of the nation and the world, Azzarelli said. I do think it (the weaker ban) was odd. That really hasnt happened in any other community. But its very clear that special-interest groups made it happen. It wasnt the public. People overwhelmingly understand the dangers of secondhand smoke, and they want to be protected from secondhand smoke cigarettes in public places.In some states surrounding Nevada, anti-smoking cigarettes policies are even tougher: As of July 1, insurer Humana no longer hires cigarettes users in Arizona. Humana rolled out a similar rule in Ohio in 2009.But Humana spokesman Ross Mc­Lerran said such a policy is unlikely in Nevada, because its one of 29 states that make it illegal to discriminate against smokers in hiring.
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          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/sunrise_hospital_snuffs_smoking.html</link>
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          <title>Attorney General Plans Enforcement Over Cigarette Sales</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-13 16:40:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Attorney General Gary Kings office said Wednesday it plans to take enforcement action over what it views as the illegal sale of some cigarettes online at a store owned by state Indian Affairs Secretary Arthur Allison.Assistant Attorney General Nan Erdman told a legislative committee the office was investigating the sale of certain cigarettes store that are prohibited in New Mexico and the sale of untaxed cheap cigarettes to non-Indians by the Star Ranch Store, which is near Farmington on the Navajo Nation.She said the office will try to collect taxes that may be owed to the state and fees from some manufacturers. There are other steps that can be taken, including seizing prohibited cigarettes, but Erdman declined to say specifically what the attorney general might do or who will be subject to enforcement actions. Manufacturers and distributors of online cigarettes as well as Allisons store could be targeted.She said letters had been sent to certain manufacturers, whom she declined to identify, asking for their cooperation in the agencys investigation.Allison has said he turned over operation of the store to his son more than a year ago and hasnt received any compensation from the business since Gov. Susana Martinez appointed him in March to run the Indian Affairs Department. He is the first Navajo appointed to the cabinet-level job.Allison also has said he intends to relinquish ownership of the family business to his son.No legislators on the discount cigarette online Settlement Revenue Oversight Committee have criticized Allison or called for him to step down in light of the investigation.At issue in the cigarette sales at Allisons store are politically thorny legal questions over tribal sovereignty and the states legal authority to regulate and tax buy cigarettes sold on tribal land to non-Indians. Theres also a financial issue at stake for the state.Unregulated sales of certain cigarettes by tribal vendors may put New Mexico at risk of losing part of the more than $35 million it receives yearly under a 1998 nationwide settlement with large buy cigarette online companies, according to the attorney general.Erdman said the attorney generals office had found that Allisons store was selling cigarettes, including Seneca brand, which is not certified to sell its products in New Mexico. Cigarettes also were sold to non-Indians without state tax stamps, which are to be affixed by distributors so New Mexico can track cigarettes sales. No problems were found at other vendors on Navajo lands, she said.In New Mexico, vendors are supposed to buy cigarettes from state-licensed distributors. However, it appears that at least some of the cigarettes sold at Allisons store came from a distributor affiliated with the Winnebago tribe in Nebraska. That distributor is not licensed by the state, according to Erdman.The Seneca cigarettes are manufactured by Canadian-based Grand River Enterprises, which has sued New Mexico and the attorney general.The company contends the state cant enforce its cigarette regulations on tribal lands, including a requirement for the manufacturer to pay fees based on its sales. The lawsuit also says the state has no authority to prohibit the sales of Seneca and other cigarettes on tribal lands. The company describes itself as the largest manufacturer of Native American made cigarettes products in North America.Under the 1998 cigarettes settlement, companies make payments to states to help cover health costs related to smoking cigarettes. New Mexico and other states have enacted laws that require other manufacturers such as Grand River Enterprises, which never agreed to be part of the settlement, to set aside similar payments into special funds.Erdman told lawmakers the state cant collect taxes on cigarette sales on tribal land to tribal members. However, she said retailers on Navajo lands, such as Allisons store, are supposed to charge the full amount of state tax on cigarettes — $1.66 a package — sold to non-Indians.Under a 2010 law, she said, tribal vendors do not have to charge the New Mexico tax on sales to non-Indian if the tribe imposes its own tax of at least 75-cents-a-pack. Tribes keep revenues from that tax. The Navajo Nation charges a $1 tax but has never certified it with the state Taxation and Revenue Department.
Other cigarettes news and tobacco market events you can find at links bellow:
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Cigarettes &amp;amp; Tobacco News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Online Cigarettes Tobacco News
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          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/attorney_general_plans_enforcement_over_cigarette_sales.html</link>
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          <title>L.B. Gets Mixed Reviews On Three Measures</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-12 16:38:00</pubDate> 
          <description>During a busy City Council meeting, members of the public had different takes that ranged from praise to criticism on three city ordinances.During the June 28 meeting, the council approved ordinances authorizing the city to bond for a professional consulting contract for a solar project; banning smoking cigarettes on city beaches; and approving a trial of parking meters at two city parking lots.The first ordinance was a $250,000 bond ordinance for consulting fees for a solar project that the city has planned to undertake .During the public hearing segment resident Harold Bobrow questioned why Thompson Design, the city planner, was selected as consultant for the project.City Finance Director Ronald Mehlhorn Sr. explained that the city trusts the firm.Mayor Adam Schneider went on to say that the city has a history with Thompson Design.We chose them based upon them having done it in other municipalities, based upon our previous experience with them, Schneider said. It isnt that we just picked at random.Bobrow also questioned the $250,00 price tag for the consulting fee, but CouncilmanJohn Pallone explained it is because of the scope of the project.That amount of money is based on a 4- megawatt project, which is a huge project, he said. That 4-megawatt project gives us a wide range of what we can do, meaning that we can get more departments involved.Pallone said that if the city could partner with groups such as the Long Branch Board of Education, the Long Branch Housing Authority and Monmouth Medical Center, then the price might come down.Schneider said in an interview last month that the scope of the solar project could range from solar panels that would help the city cut utility costs to a solar installation that would produce enough energy to sell back to the utility.Schneider said that the solar project envisioned is different from projects undertaken in other municipalities.We are doing something different than others have done, he said. We think that this has to pay for itself both in terms of cost savings and tax credits and hopefully in selling power back to JCP&amp;L.Pallone said the size of the project might attract some outside funding sources.Another reason we looked at this size project is there is a good chance we might get all of that money back, he said. Many communities have had the entire project paid for, and that is certainly something we are pursuing.Pallone cited the American Recovery &amp; ReinvestmentAct of 2009, which offers a 30 percent tax credit for projects such as solar panels.However, resident Vincent Lepore was critical of the city for not waiting for the county to develop a shared-services plan for solar projects.With the shared-services program with the county, we would be able to do better in terms of interest with this project, he said. Our financing would be a much better position.Lepore wasnt the only one concerned by the citys bond ordinance.My concern is the continual bonding, Harold Pudgy Cooper said. I think solar energy is a great idea, but how can we afford to do this?City Planner Pratap Talwar, of Thompson Design, gave a lengthy initial presentation on the solar project to the council on Feb. 22, during which he suggested that the city look at the many solar options available to reduce the citys $750,000 expenditure on electric power each year.Talwar said the city has many options where solar energy could be utilized, including City Hall, schools, firehouses, housing authority buildings, public buildings with large rooftops, private buildings with large footprints, and a few vacant sites.He told the council that of the $750,000 a year the city spends on electricity costs, $500,000 is for streetlights and $250,000 for city buildings.The next move the city made was to ban smoking cigarettes on all city beaches, an ordinance that was discussed earlier this month.Karen Blumenfeld, who is the executive director of Global Advisors on Smokefree Policy, an advocacy group based in Summit, praised the citys efforts to restrict smoking cigarettes.She said that the city has the strongest ordinance regarding smoking cigarettes on beaches in the state and that only a handful of municipalities have measures that are equal.Bobrow also praised the ordinance, but suggested the city get creative with the funds obtained from any fines.This is a great idea; the only other thing I can think of is that maybe those fines should go to the cancer society or a program to prevent kids from smoking cigarettes, the local resident said.When asked, Schneider said that the city might expand the ordinance next summer.We may actually extend it next year to the Promenade and maybe all city parks, he said .The council also approved a trial run for parking meters that will be placed in two Beachfront North city-owned parking lots for the summer.The city will charge $1 an hour on weekdays and $2 an hour on weekends for parking between 9 a.m. and 9 p.m. on a total of 59 spaces.Business Administrator Howard Woolley Jr. previously projected that the city could take in up to $100,000 in revenue from the two lots during the 90-day trial.Resident Diana Multare credited the city for the parking meter trial.Frankly I think this is a great idea to experiment and to see what happens, she said .Resident Bill McLaughlin also praised themove but suggested the city should expand the meters right away.I think this is a great idea to bring in money to the city, he said. What about Pier Village? That is where the money is going to be made.Council President Michael Sirianni reminded residents that the parking meters are being provided free for the trial and that the council will see how the trial works.We picked these two lots, we are testing it out, we will see what the impact is, he said. We are looking at other forms of income for the city. … This will give us an idea on how it works.
Other cigarettes news and tobacco market events you can find at links bellow:
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Cigarettes &amp;amp; Tobacco News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Discount Cigarettes &amp;amp; Tobacco News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Discount-Cigarettes-Planet.Com Cigarettes News</description>
          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/l_b__gets_mixed_reviews_on_three_measures.html</link>
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          <title>Paramus Health Board Bans Smoking In Public Places</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-11 16:37:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Paramus is once again at the forefront of buy cigarette online control, as the Board of Health unanimously adopted an ordinance that prohibits smoking cigarettes in borough parks, playgrounds, public swimming facilities and recreational areas.The ordinance, approved last month, covers lighted cigarettes, cigars, pipes and electronic cigarettes within the boundaries of smoke-free zones, borough public areas that include the Municipal Pool, the Band Shell and the Paramus Golf Club Mini Golf Course, according to Health Officer John Hopper. Several parks that are not used for recreation, such as Firemans Park on Forest Avenue which just consists of a monument, are not covered under the ordinance.The areas included will have signs advising visitors about their status. Penalties range from a fine of $50 to $100 for the first violation, $100 to $200 for the second violation, and $200 to $500 for the third and subsequent violations, according to Hopper.Were very pleased that the Paramus Board of Health is very interested in preserving public health in Paramus for its residents and visitors to parks, especially since the parks are places where people congregate to engage in physical activity, said Karen Blumenfeld, executive director of New Jersey Global Advisors on Smokefree Policy (NJGASP).New Jersey is behind only California for the number of municipalities with smoking cigarettes ordinances, with 150 communities restricting smoking cigarettes in outside public areas to some degree, according to Blumenfeld. The limitations range from covering only the areas outside municipal buildings to the ordinances adopted by the 100 communities that contain restrictions or bans in all public parks.Its not a new phenomenon in New Jersey, but its gaining momentum, she said. New York Citys new law served as an impetus for other communities to follow, and many New Jersey shore towns have passed restrictions.In addition to New York City banning smoking cigarettes in all its public parks, Long Branch recently banned smoking cigarettes on all public beaches, and Seaside Park banned smoking cigarettes on all beaches, boardwalks and recreational areas, according to Blumenfeld.Secondhand smoke cigarettes can still be a problem for people outside of enclosed areas, Hopper said. Approximately half the childhood cases of asthma, chronic bronchitis and wheezing can be attributed to secondhand smoke, and it also causes cardiovascular disease in people of all ages.It is less concentrated because it is outside, but there is a certain amount of exposure to environmental cheap cigarettes smoke cigarettes even if it is outdoors, Hopper said.The regulation also helps people who have conditions that are easily exacerbated by even small amounts of smoke, Blumenfeld said. Particularly among senior citizens, any amount of smoke cigarettes can cause discomfort regardless of the concentration.In addition, the change can simultaneously reduce the number of people who take up smoking cigarettes and help smokers who wish to quit succeed, according to Blumenfeld. Approximately 70 percent of smokers wish to quit the habit, and having smoke-free parks gives them another place they can go without being reminded of the habit.Children, who often emulate what they see in adults, frequent the playgrounds where smoking cigarettes is now banned and will see non-smoking cigarettes normalized, according to Blumenfeld. Because 90 percent of smokers begin the habit before age 18, preventing children from becoming smokers is important in controlling discount cigarettes usage, she said.There is a factor that children tend to emulate adult behavior, and when children observe adults doing certain things, whether it be positive or negative behavior, they want to emulate it, Hopper said. So, if we prevent adults from smoking cigarettes in front of children, perhaps they wont tend to take up smoking cigarettes.The ordinance will also help the environment, Blumenfeld said. Banning smoking cigarettes in parks will reduce the waste created by discarded cheap cigarette online and cigarette packs, simultaneously keeping the boroughs parks cleaner while reducing the amount of work required for their maintenance.This is not the first time Paramus has been at the forefront of legislation involved discount cigarette online use. In the past, the borough has passed ordinances restricting the placement of cigarette vending machines, vigorously pursued the enforcement of preventing underage cigarettes for sale purchases and was at the forefront of the states ban on electronic online cigarettes in work and public environments.It serves as a model for other communities, which I think is key, Blumenfeld said. For other communities in Bergen County that have not yet looked at a smoke-free parks policy, Paramus is a good model for them to follow.
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          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/paramus_health_board_bans_smoking_in_public_places.html</link>
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          <title>Judge Recuses Himself In Worcester Cigarettes Ad Lawsuit
</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-10 22:33:00</pubDate> 
          <description>A federal lawsuit challenging the citys ban on visible cigarettes online product advertising has been moved to Boston after Judge F. Dennis Saylor IV recused himself.Judge Saylor, who sits in U.S. District Court in Worcester, disqualified himself from the case because he once represented Philip Morris USA Inc. when he was a lawyer at Goodwin Procter LLP.Morris is among the buy cigarettes companies that filed suit against Worcester on June 17. The lawsuit sought a federal judges ruling that a new city ordinance violates the Constitution and the plaintiffs civil rights. The city has temporarily agreed not to enforce a portion of the ordinance banning advertisements of cigarette and cheap cigarettes products visible from any city street, park, school or educational institution.Judge Saylor said none of his work on behalf of Philip Morris involved the advertising of cigarettes products, First Amendment issues or any other issues directly related to the lawsuit. But he said the circumstances of the case caused him to believe that his partiality might reasonably be questioned.The case is now assigned to U.S. District Court Judge Douglas P. Woodlock.
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&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; CigarettesPro.com Tobacco News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; CigarettesOn.Com  Tobacco News</description>
          <link>http://www.discount-cigarettes-planet.com/cigarettes-news/judge_recuses_himself_in_worcester_cigarettes_ad_lawsuit.html</link>
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