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   <title>www.cigarettesbox.com - cigarettes-news</title>
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          <title>Barring Cigarettes Sales On Tribal Land To Non-Indians</title>
          <pubDate>2011-11-22 15:35:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The Fourth District Court of Appeal has upheld an injunction barring the sale of discount cigarette online by stores operating on lands held in trust in eastern Riverside County for the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians, to non-Indians.Div. Two, in a July 13 decision ordered published yesterday, concluded the government was likely to prevail on its claims that Black Hawk cigarettes store Inc., and its proprietor Frederick Allen McAllister, were engaged in unlawful business practices in the operations of its four stores in Palm Springs and Cathedral City.In the governments complaint, Attorney General Kamala D. Harris asserted McAllister and Black Hawk had violated the state online cigarettes directory law by selling cheap cigarettes not listed in the directory; sold non-fire-safe-certified products in violation of the California Cigarette Fire Safety and Firefighter Protection Act; and violated the federal Contraband Cigarette Trafficking Act. The government sought a preliminary injunction, enjoining defendants from the foregoing violations, particularly the sale of cigarettes online to non-Indians.McAllister and Black Hawk filed a motion to quash or dismiss the complaint and a demurrer or motion to strike, all asserting jurisdictional challenges. They argued that the directory statute and the cigarette fire-safety act were not enforceable against sales occurring on the Agua Caliente reservation.The defendants further contended that the federal CCTA could not be enforced by a state agency and that none of the state laws apply on the reservation because of tribal sovereignty and because states cannot regulate Indians in Indian country without congressional consent. They also insisted the governments claims were preempted by federal law.Riverside Superior Court Judge John G. Evans overruled the demurrer and denied the motion to quash, ruling that tribal sovereignty did not apply because defendants were not members of the Agua Caliente tribe.Evans also found that federal preemption did not operate and that state laws apply to regulate sales of cigarettes to non-Indians on tribal lands, and that the governments claims against defendants were mainly based on violations of the California cigarette tax laws.Defendants subsequently filed additional opposition to the motion for a preliminary injunction on the grounds that Black Hawk would suffer irreparable harm if the injunction was granted, causing Black Hawk to cease operations and fire 30 employees.They also contended the government could not establish the likelihood of success because the CCTA claim was barred and the other claims violated the Indian commerce clause.Evans rejected these additional arguments, granted the preliminary injunction and issued a written ruling prohibiting defendants from selling off-directory, non-fire-safe-certified, untaxed buy cigarettes except for sales to enrolled members of any federally-recognized tribe of California. He said Black Hawk could also sell unstamped, untaxed packs of discount cigarettes to registered members of any federally-recognized tribe of California on any Indian reservation in the state other than the Bands reservation.Defendants appealed, contending that the state had no right to regulate cigarettes sales on the Agua Caliente reservation because the tribe had the exclusive authority to regulate cigarettes sales on the reservation.Writing for the appellate court, Justice Carol D. Codrington said [w]e reject this entirely new theory, raised for the first time on appeal since the United States Supreme Court has confirmed a states authority to tax and regulate cigarette sales to non-Indians. She further noted that since 1985, the [Agua Caliente Band]s tribal ordinance has required compliance with California laws governing cigarette sales.More recently, Codrington continued, the court has said where there is no federal preemption and the state has a strong off-reservation interest, the states authority extends to conduct on the reservation, including even Indians and tribal members.She said the California cigarettes directory law promotes public health by increasing the costs of cigarettes and discouraging smoking cigarettes, and the cigarette fire-safety law serves the public interest in reducing fires caused by cigarettes.The justice reasoned California [l]ikewise… has an important state interest in enforcing the unfair competition law… and the federal and state laws taxing cigarettes.Codrington concluded there was no federal or tribal interest which outweighed these state interests, and this showing of obvious public harm was not rebutted by a showing of grave or irreparable harm to defendants, so the government established that it was likely to succeed on the merits of its claims.
Other cigarettes news and tobacco market events you can find at links bellow:
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Cigarettes Online News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Online Cigarettes Tobacco News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Discount Cigarettes Tobacco News</description>
          <link>http://www.cigarettesbox.com/cigarettes-news/barring_cigarettes_sales_on_tribal_land_to_non_indians.html</link>
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          <title>Apartments Pose High Secondhand Smoke Hazards</title>
          <pubDate>2011-11-20 15:33:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health announced Wednesday that multi-unit housing can expose hazardous secondhand smoke cigarettes to non-smokers living adjacent to those who do smoke.Since 2006, secondhand smoke cigarettes has been classified by the California Air Resources Board as a &amp;#34;toxic air contaminant&amp;#34; that can lead to death, serious illnesse, and a overall health hazards.Research shows that residents could be exposed to dangerous levels of smoke cigarettes through cracks in fixtures, electrical outlets, pipes, vents and baseboards, as well as shared venitlation systems and windows.The study shows that 30 to 50 percent of air came from other units and all buildings, regardless of when they were built, were affected. For non-smokers, the cheap cigarettes smoke cigarettes particles in their housing units can reach levesl equal to and surpassing those of a smoky bar or casino.&amp;#34;More than 41 percent in our country are in multi-unit buildings and just as you can get smells and noises from one unit to another, the same goes for online cigarettes smoke,&amp;#34; said Dr. Johnathan E. Fielding from the Department of Public Health.With over 7,000 chemicals in cigarettes online smoke, secondhand smoke cigarettes is the third leading cause of preventable death in the United States. Secondhand smoke cigarettes can cause severe damage to young children such as ear infections, frequent asthma attacks, repiratory symptoms and create a greater risk for sudden infant death syndrome, the leading cause of death in healthy infants.A 2007 county health survey showed that a majority of those living in L.A. County are in favor of smoke-free housing. Though 60 percent of smokers and 77 percent of non-smokers believe there should be a law seperating smoking cigarettes and non-smoking cigarettes places, the multi-unit structure of the units can still pose a threat because smoke cigarettes can transfer unit to unit.&amp;#34;Sixty-six percent agrees or strongly agrees that smoking cigarettes in an apartment or condominium puts people in other units at risk. And parents who try to protect their child by having smoke cigarettes free homes have even greater understanding of the harm to others by smoking cigarettes in units. With 81.5% of them agreeing that smoking cigarettes in units puts others in the building at risk,&amp;#34; said Dr. Jonathan M. Sammet.The only way to fully protect people from secondhand smoke cigarettes is to completely rid of smoking cigarettes in all indoor spaces. While seperating smokers from non-smokers, cleaning the air and ventilating buildings is a progressive step, it does not completely protect non-smokers.Jackie Eco, a tenant and property manager of a rent controlled building in Valley Village who spoke at a press conference Wednesday, described how the tenant living below her smokes to the point where it, &amp;#34;literally seeps ups through the floor causing me to have severe asthma attacks and allergic reactions.&amp;#34; Eco temporarily moved out of her apartment to aviod the smoke.&amp;#34;I would like to know why I am not being protected,&amp;#34; she said. &amp;#34;Why is my health being compromised for his unhealthy activities?&amp;#34;County policymakers are working to implement smoke-free housing laws. Mayors from all over thecounty are urging fellow cities to follow their actions.
Other cigarettes news and tobacco market events you can find at links bellow:
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Best-Buy-Cigarettes.Com Tobacco News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Online Cigarettes Tobacco News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; CigarettesOn.Com  Tobacco News</description>
          <link>http://www.cigarettesbox.com/cigarettes-news/apartments_pose_high_secondhand_smoke_hazards.html</link>
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          <title>Multi-Unit Housing Smoke-Free Initiative</title>
          <pubDate>2011-11-06 21:35:00</pubDate> 
          <description>A new statewide push aims to protect non-smokers from the dangers of secondhand smoke, meaning smokers could be told not to light up in their own apartments.The voluntary initiative, led by the Florida Department of Health&amp;#39;s cigarettes online Free Florida Program, will help those interested in making multi-unit housing smoke-free get started. According to its website, secondhand smoke cigarettes can travel from one apartment to another. In fact, the DOH says &amp;#34;secondhand smoke cigarettes can seep through lighting fixtures, cracks in walls, around plumbing, under doors, through shared ventilation, as well as permeate building materials, and then enter adjoining units.&amp;#34;One Sunny Isles woman is spearheading the move in her Winston Towers building. Arlene Koenig is a colon cancer survivor who wants to protect herself and others from the dangers of secondhand smoke.&amp;#34;I&amp;#39;m a cancer survivor and this became personal for me,&amp;#34; said Koenig. &amp;#34;I do not want to breathe in that poison.&amp;#34;With the help of Miami Dade County&amp;#39;s cigarettes for sale Prevention Program and Sunny Isles City Commissioner Jeanette Gatto, Koenig is trying to ban smoking cigarettes on balconies and in the pool area of her building. Eventually, she&amp;#39;d like her entire building to become smoke-free.Still, some worry the move is a violation of personal rights.&amp;#34;I would move out of that facility and find another facility where I had the right to smoke cigarettes my own pack of buy cigarette online I bought with my money,&amp;#34; smoker Trevor Robert Duffy said.Koenig argues that despite 1st amendment rights, &amp;#34;smokers need to realize that just because there&amp;#39;s a first amendment in the constitution, they can&amp;#39;t trample on someone else&amp;#39;s rights.&amp;#34;These conversations could be happening in a building near you. There have already been talks of making some public housing units smoke-free. In the meantime, Koenig says she&amp;#39;s in the beginning stages of her movement. She and the Jeanette Gatto are working to convince the board of directors in her building to implement the policy.
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
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; CigarettesBox.Com Cigarettes News</description>
          <link>http://www.cigarettesbox.com/cigarettes-news/multi_unit_housing_smoke_free_initiative.html</link>
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          <title>Smoking Ban May Go Too Far For MSU</title>
          <pubDate>2011-10-18 17:18:00</pubDate> 
          <description>From a health standpoint, theres a lot to be said for banning smoking cigarettes from the Montana State University campus. But the blanket ban on cigarettes store use adopted by campus leaders earlier this month seems a bit much.Protecting nonsmokers from secondhand smoke cigarettes is certainly a good thing, and measures to ensure that happens are justifiable. But a ban on all use of discount cigarettes on the 1,400-acre-plus MSU campus – including smokeless discount cigarette online and online cigarettes use in individuals private vehicles – doesnt seem necessary to accomplish that.The ban may send a message about cigarettes for sale use, but experience will prove the ban to be unenforceable in many instances. Worst of all, though, it could turn potential students away. And that may make campus officials regret the ban in the future.Currently, smoking cigarettes is banned from all MSU buildings and areas outside those buildings within 25 feet of entrances. The new ban, which will take effect in August of next year, will prohibit the use of all cheap cigarette online anywhere on campus – including at football games. The only exceptions will be for lab experiments or Native American ceremonies – with prior approval from the presidents office.Various random and unscientific polls of MSU faculty, employees and students have shown support for the ban, but far from unanimous support. And a forum on the issue earlier this week revealed sharply different opinions among the MSU community.An outright ban on all buy cigarette online use on some of Montanas smaller campuses may make sense. But the sprawling MSU campus will leave few options for cigarettes online users short of a considerable hike to get off the campus.Nonsmokers could be protected from the dangers of secondhand smoke cigarettes by restricting smoking cigarettes to a few isolated areas within the campus and within privately owned vehicles. And its hard to see how smokeless cigarettes threatens the health of non-users.Once the ban takes effect, students and university employees will likely ignore the smokeless-cigarettes ban and find ways to sneak smokes in isolated places on campus. And cigarettes use will be widespread – and likely ignored by campus police – in tailgate areas before and during football games.cigarettes use in any form poses substantial health risks and should certainly be avoided by everyone. But there is still an element within the population that uses these products regularly. And potential students within that element could be sent looking for other schools by the new cigarettes ban.University officials will probably be revisiting this issue in the non-too-distant future.
Other cigarettes news and tobacco market events you can find at links bellow:
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Cigarettes Online News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Online Cigarettes Tobacco News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Discount Cigarettes Tobacco News</description>
          <link>http://www.cigarettesbox.com/cigarettes-news/smoking_ban_may_go_too_far_for_msu.html</link>
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          <title>Vashon Retailers Cited For Cigarettes Sales To Minors</title>
          <pubDate>2011-09-10 12:27:00</pubDate> 
          <description>King Countys overall retailer compliance rate has also dropped — from 96 percent in 2009 to less than 89 percent in the 999 inspections done so far this year.The ongoing stings, conducted year-round by Public Health — Seattle &amp; King County, involve a group of teenagers, aged 15 to 17 ½, who try to buy cigarette products from retailers. They dont lie about their ages if asked, and they use real I.D.s.Were not trying to trick retailers, said Scott Neal, cigarettes-prevention program manager.The retailers cited for selling to underage teens were:• Vashon Market, 17639 100th S.W. Ave.
Three Vashon Island retailers have been cited for illegally selling cheap cigarettes to minors, a major reversal from an island-wide clean record between 2005 and 2009, disappointed public-health officials say.• Vashon Mart (Chevron) doing business as Island Mart (Chevron), 17803 Vashon Highway S.W.• Moms Grocery &amp; Deli, 19124 Vashon Highway S.W.A fourth retailer, Harbor Mercantile at 103rd and Southwest 240th, refused to sell to the underage teens.Neal said the Vashon performance was disappointing. Three of four is not a good day. The teens will do about 1,500 sting-type inspections by the end of the year.Selling buy cigarettes to a minor results in a fine for retailers of $100 for the first offense and required education about selling cigarettes online responsibly. Clerks are fined $50. Repeat offenders can be fined as much as $1,500 and see their cigarettes-sales licenses suspended.Dr. David Fleming, director of Public Health — Seattle &amp; King County, said progress over the past decade in reducing the impact of cigarettes addiction has been undermined by drastic cuts to cigarettes-prevention-program funding, as well as by the cheap cigarette online industry, which he said continues to find new ways to market products that appeal to kids.Those include dissolvable buy cigarette online that closely resembles gum, candy and breath strips and fruit-flavored cigarettes for sale products such as cigars, cigarillos and snus, the teabag-like pouches.If Washingtons overall rate of compliance with laws barring discount cigarettes sales to minors falls below 80 percent, Neal said, the state could lose up to 40 percent of a federal substance-abuse block grant funds, amounting to as much as $13 million to $14 million.Public Health maintains a focus on kids because 90 percent of current smokers say they became addicted before they were 19. Statistics also show that about a third of all kids who become regular smokers before adulthood will eventually die from smoking cigarettes-related diseases, the health department said.
Other cigarettes news and tobacco market events you can find at links bellow:
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Cigarettes Online 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 Tobacco News</description>
          <link>http://www.cigarettesbox.com/cigarettes-news/vashon_retailers_cited_for_cigarettes_sales_to_minors.html</link>
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          <title>The Power Of Persuasion</title>
          <pubDate>2011-09-09 12:26:00</pubDate> 
          <description>An advertisement in the newspaper the other day for hypnosis classes to helping people with weight control issues got me remembering back to when I needed help to kick a habit.While Im not a big believer in mumbo-jumbo or a lot of the touchy-feelly stuff that passes for armchair psychology and quick-fixes to real issues, I do believe the human mind can accomplish a great deal, especially when its made to believe its getting a little help.More than 30 years ago I was a three-pack-a-day, menthol cigarette smoker who my wife could and would predict when Id light a cigarette. It was automatic when I talked on the telephone, when I wrote a story, when I stopped and talked to someone in a hallway or anywhere else, when I was watching TV, when I was reading the newspaper, after eating breakfast, lunch or dinner, when driving, when walking ... as you can see just about any and all times.I wanted to quit, but obviously not badly enough after I started up again following nearly six weeks of being off my cheap cigarettes addiction following surgery.A Columbus police sergeant was the department hypnotist and due to his propensity for being at the wrong place at the wrong time was taken off the street after multiple justified uses of his sidearm. The sergeant was a friend who I had enough dirt on to trust him when he offered to hypnotize me and help me quit smoking cigarettes. It should be noted the sergeant was also a friend of my police officer brother-in-law, who also had aforementioned knowledge of the sergeant.He repeatedly told me he wouldnt do anything funny while I was under and wouldnt attempt to learn anything from me that I wouldnt normally share, so I opted to trust him ... after gently reminding him of a few things I knew about some of his colorful antics.Three times over a six-week period the sergeant relaxed me, while in my mind I sat on a big back porch of a plantation house I had once visited in Virginia overlooking a sparkling lake on a bright, clear day as a cool breeze blew. He suggested I was strong enough to quit smoking cigarettes if that was truly what I wanted to do. He told me later he was merely reinforcing what I already wanted to do, but wasnt convinced I could accomplish.A few weeks after the last session I was driving home from work about 11:30 p.m., smoking cigarettes the last cigarette in the pack. I remember mentally asking myself if I was going to stop and buy another pack or just quit.That was the last cigarette I ever smoked and have never wanted one since that late-night decision on Sullivant Avenue on the west side of Columbus as I headed home.The sergeant, now long retired and an accomplished scrimshaw artist of ivory knife handles who travels the nation to juried art shows, to this day takes credit for my stopping. Does he deserve the credit? I dont know, but I do think it helped make quitting easier for me.The decision, I possibly mistakenly believe, was mine, but maybe the hypnosis pushed me to make that decision.As leery as I am of ever losing control, I do know if I hadnt trusted the sergeant, there is no way he ever could have hypnotized me.
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; Cheap Cigarettes &amp;amp; Tobacco News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Discount Cigarettes Tobacco News</description>
          <link>http://www.cigarettesbox.com/cigarettes-news/the_power_of_persuasion.html</link>
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          <title>Bastrop Prohibits Cigarettes In Parks</title>
          <pubDate>2011-08-28 21:43:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The nine parks in the city of Bastrop will soon be cigarettes-free, thanks to the Board of Aldermen.At Thursday nights meeting, the board voted unanimously in favor of the ban after hearing public comments on the matter. The ban includes all buy cigarettes products, including chewing and smokeless cigarettes.At the boards June meeting, members approved an ordinance that would ban the use of any cheap cigarettes products during public events at any of the citys parks.Mayor Betty Alford-Olive said she was very grateful for the participation of Bastrops residents.This was obviously an important issue, Alford-Olive said. I very much appreciate the involvement of our citizens.Alford-Olive said the issue had been brought before the board earlier this summer.Weve talked about this for a while now, Alford-Olive said. We spoke to two citizens who had opposing viewpoints on this matter.Alford-Olive said the decision for the ban was made in the best interest of the citys residents. However, she acknowledged the boards Thursday decision may not be permanent.Well just have to wait and see how people feel, Alford-Olive said. Moving forward, this is an issue that could change.Alford-Olive said the city passed a smoking cigarettes ordinance in 2007 which banned smoking cigarettes within 15 feet of public places, including parts of the parks that have seating areas and bleachers. She said violators of the ban would be issued citations, with fines set at $25 for the first offense, $50 for the second offense and $100 for subsequent offenses.The cigarettes online ban takes effect Jan. 1.
Other cigarettes news and tobacco market events you can find at links bellow:
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Cigarettes Online News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Discount Cigarettes &amp;amp; Tobacco News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; CigarettesOn.Com  Tobacco News</description>
          <link>http://www.cigarettesbox.com/cigarettes-news/bastrop_prohibits_cigarettes_in_parks.html</link>
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          <title>Students Work To Ban Cigarettes Use In Films For Children</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-30 10:28:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Moviegoers who saw the computer-animated, PG-rated and widely acclaimed film &amp;#34;Rango&amp;#34; earlier this year also saw more than 50 instances of discount cigarettes use - albeit by secondary characters who producers said never were meant to be emulated.&amp;#34;Being an animated film, it&amp;#39;s aimed at a younger audience,&amp;#34; said Alex Martinez, a 19-year-old student at San Joaquin Delta College. And, he said, when young children see online cigarettes used in movies - no matter who is using it - they are more likely to smoke.Teen volunteers in San Joaquin County have joined a national effort that is urging production companies to ban cigarettes store use in movies with less than an R rating. As part of the discount cigarette online In Entertainment project, organized through the county public health department&amp;#39;s cigarettes-control program, students have been tallying instances of buy cigarette online use in popular movies and are developing anti-cigarettes public-service announcements they hope will appear at movie theaters and air over the radio.&amp;#34;At my school, there are adolescents who do smoke cigarettes cigarettes,&amp;#34; said Rudy Buenrostro of Franklin High School. &amp;#34;They&amp;#39;re already addicted. Television, movies - that has something to do with it.&amp;#34;cigarettes companies are prohibited from advertising their products to children. But including cigarettes-related images in movies that children watch has a similar effect, said Christiane Highfill, who oversees the county&amp;#39;s Students in Prevention program.Program participants are leading the cheap cigarette online in Entertainment effort. Teams of students go at least monthly to see newly released films and rate them based on whether cigarettes for sale is depicted and in what context.&amp;#34;What kind of images are being shown in these movies?&amp;#34; Highfill said. &amp;#34;They&amp;#39;re giving a false image of success and glamour.&amp;#34;According to the results of a state-ordered survey, about 4 percent of San Joaquin County fifth-graders report that they have tried a cigarette. Nearly all fifth-graders - 93 percent of them - believe smoking cigarettes is &amp;#34;very bad&amp;#34; for a person&amp;#39;s health.Among 11th-graders, nearly 40 percent reported that they had smoked at least one cigarette, with 4 percent saying they smoke cigarettes daily.&amp;#34;There&amp;#39;s clearly a need to educate people about youth smoking cigarettes,&amp;#34; said Ina Collins, of the county&amp;#39;s cigarettes-control program. &amp;#34;Where better to start than at the local level?&amp;#34;In a report released in July, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention noted that on-screen smoking cigarettes in youth-rated movies had declined for the fifth straight year.In 2010, cigarettes was seen in nearly 600 youth-rated movies, according to the center. That&amp;#39;s a decrease of more than 70 percent from 2005, when the agency recorded more than 2,000 instances of on-screen cigarettes use.&amp;#34;We want to see more,&amp;#34; said Shalvi Prasad, a teen volunteer from McNair High School.Said Buenrostro: &amp;#34;If we keep cigarettes far away from children, there&amp;#39;s a much higher chance they won&amp;#39;t pick it up later on.&amp;#34;
Other cigarettes news and tobacco market events you can find at links bellow:
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Best-Buy-Cigarettes.Com Tobacco News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Online Cigarettes Tobacco News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Discount Cigarettes Tobacco News</description>
          <link>http://www.cigarettesbox.com/cigarettes-news/students_work_to_ban_cigarettes_use_in_films_for_children.html</link>
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          <title>Subway Workers Enjoy An Illegal Smoke Break</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-29 09:56:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The MTA is conducting an investigation into two transit workers caught on camera smoking cigarettes cigarettes in the Christopher Street 1 Train station early Sunday morning, around 5 a.m. The place was probably deserted at that time—except for one whistleblowing customer who videotaped their graveyard-shift break, while they gaze warily at the camera trying to keep their eyes open. Now they&amp;#39;re probably going to face severe disciplinary action, and as much as we object to secondhand smoke, we can&amp;#39;t help but feel a little sad and sorry for these guys, who probably just wanted a little respite during a long overnight shift. Reached for comment, an MTA spokesperson told us the incident is being investigated. We asked if there was some exception for smoking cigarettes before you pass through the turnstiles, and were told that &amp;#34;smoking cigarettes is prohibited on ALL transit property.&amp;#34; That includes outdoor stations like Smith/9th Streets, where we once witnessed a hapless smoker get a ticket for smoking cigarettes all the way at the end of the platform in the middle of the night.So if you smoke, either get yourself an MTA uniform or leave the system before reaching for a cigarette—just make sure you&amp;#39;re not exhaling smoke cigarettes in a park or pedestrian plaza or boardwalk or beach or city pool! In other words, to paraphrase Mr. White, if you light up in a dream you&amp;#39;d better wake up and apologize.
Other cigarettes news and tobacco market events you can find at links bellow:
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Cigarettes Online News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Online Cigarettes Tobacco News
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; Discount Cigarettes Tobacco News</description>
          <link>http://www.cigarettesbox.com/cigarettes-news/subway_workers_enjoy_an_illegal_smoke_break.html</link>
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          <title>Health Consortium Focuses On Cigarettes</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-28 09:55:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The Columbia County Community Healthcare Consortium recently released its report for improving preventative and primary care in Greene and Columbia counties.The New York State Department of Health assisted the consortiums task force study by awarding it a 2-year grant. Among the recommendations was an in-depth study of buy cigarettes use and financial effects.The consortium recommended maintaining the cigarettes online tax as a way to discourage the costly habit of smoking cigarettes. According to the study, the state tax is currently $4.35 per pack, with an additional federal tax of $1.01 which makes the total cost per pack at $5.36 using 2010 figures. The American Cancer Society estimated that 85,000 adults would stop smoking cigarettes due to the cost of cigarettes. Coupled with ongoing economic strains, its possible to estimate an even higher projected number. Despite the task force study advocating the high tax, the report stated it does not support an increase at this time, citing large increases in recent years.Federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have recommended $250 million dollars to be expended in New York State for cheap cigarettes cessation and prevention, but details of how to meet this goal were not provided at this time. The state currently expends $41 million a year on anti-cigarettes actions.The report stated that physicians are the most effective resource for helping people quit smoking cigarettes. Rising health care costs can reduce an individuals access to physicians, but the report advocates reimbursements to pay doctors to work with patients on cessation. In 2008, Medicare adopted specific codes for reimbursement after studies revealed 10 percent of recipients, or 4 million people nationwide were smokers.Despite the benefit of providing reimbursement incentives to physicians to spend time working with patients on one of societys deadliest lifestyle programs, Medicare and Medicaid are two of the few payers to recognize the codes, said the report.If all insurers and self-employed plans adopted the codes, the task force estimates the cost to Greene and Columbia counties would range from $300,000-$350,000, assuming 10 percent of the 21,000 participating smokers used all eight cessation sessions.The report said, At the local level, action should be taken to convince local employers and insurance plans to use the reimbursement codes. In response to the Environmental Protection Agency classifying secondhand smoke cigarettes a Group A carcinogen, the task force urged local municipalities to ban smoking cigarettes in parks and playgrounds.Earlier this month, The Village Board of Athens unanimously approved a resolution banning smoking cigarettes in some local parks, particularly in areas where children play. New York City has banned smoking cigarettes in all parks and beaches.The report undeniably highlights the growing need to further address financial challenges cigarettes use poses for the state and counties.  The recommendations have provided data to be used as a guideline tool as officials continue to debate buy cigarette online related health issues.
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
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;bull; CigarettesOn.Com  Tobacco News</description>
          <link>http://www.cigarettesbox.com/cigarettes-news/health_consortium_focuses_on_cigarettes.html</link>
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          <title>Being Hooked On Hookah Can Be Harmful</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-27 09:53:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Hookah, a type of water pipe smoking cigarettes where herbal buy cigarettes is often infused with a fruity taste or smell, is popular in many city bars. The smoke cigarettes is heated, passed through water and sucked through a hose out of a mouthpiece.Assaad Yacoub, 22, says he started smoking cigarettes around the age of 16 in his native Lebanon, but he is well aware of the risk. But what is rooted in tradition for him and a lot of his Middle Eastern friends has become increasingly popular among his peers in the United States too.&amp;#34;I don&amp;#39;t smoke cigarettes cigarettes, so that&amp;#39;s a plus. But my parents don&amp;#39;t like it when I smoke cigarettes this,&amp;#34; says Yacoub.According to health experts, Yacoub&amp;#39;s parents are right to be concerned because they say it can be just as harmful as lighting up cigarettes. They also say that young smokers are not aware of the side effects.&amp;#34;A one-hour session of hookah smoking cigarettes can deliver about 100 to 200 times more smoke cigarettes than smoking cigarettes a cigarette, and that smoke cigarettes contains a lot of the same carcinogens and toxins as a cigarette can,&amp;#34; says Dr. Susan Kansagra of the city Health Department&amp;#39;s Bureau of cigarettes Control.At East Village&amp;#39;s Horus Cafe, the staff argues that getting hooked on hookah cannot possibly be as bad as a pack-a-day cigarette habit.&amp;#34;Cigarette, you smoke cigarettes cigarette, you throw it in the street. Here you&amp;#39;ve got to sit, you&amp;#39;ve got to give yourself time, you know? Enjoy life for five to 10 minutes,&amp;#34; says Horus spokesman Mahmoud Gamaa.They also say the products they use are cheap cigarettes and nicotine free, but some of them still carry a Surgeon General&amp;#39;s warning.Doctors say no matter what, the act of smoking cigarettes can still increase carbon monoxide levels, increase blood pressure and cause some of the same long-term consequences cigarette smoking cigarettes does, like heart and lung disease.Despite their love for the habit and the business it brings, hookah bar owners are supportive of a law just signed by the governor that will keep minors from smoking cigarettes hookah, starting January 2012. They say they already have that rule in place.A Brooklyn councilman also wants to ban hookah smoking cigarettes it wherever cigarette smoking cigarettes is already not allowed indoors.
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          <title>Sellers Doubt Cigarette Pack Scares Will Work</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-26 09:16:00</pubDate> 
          <description>It will be more difficult to overlook anti-smoking cigarettes messages on cigarette packs when jarring images including damaged lungs and a smoker with a tracheotomy incision start showing up prominently in 2012.Mandated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration under the 2009 Family Smoking Prevention and cheap cigarette online Control Act, the photographs and messages chosen for the campaign are sparking advance conversation.The issue has added importance in Ohio, which has drastically reduced state funding for anti-smoking cigarettes campaigns despite a smoking cigarettes rate of more than 22 percent in the adult population and 40 percent among state Medicaid recipients.Some smokers in the Dayton area, those who sell cheap cigarettes and even those who teach and study cigarette marketing and advertising on area campuses all expressed doubt that the new scare tactics will influence the smoking cigarettes rate.It wont make any difference, said Ed Alkhateeb, owner of Smokers Saver Inc. on South Smithville Road in Dayton.They have had those same kinds of pictures on packs in Europe and the Middle East for more than five years. I travel back and forth often. People who smoked there still smoke, said the native Palestinian, who lives in Kettering.A few miles south at Rich, formerly known as Smokes for Less, on Wilmington Pike in Kettering, the clerk at the cash register had the same opinion.People will smoke cigarettes regardless, said Chanel Rutledge, who has worked at the store for two years. Some people who have had tracheotomies still come in to buy discount cigarettes now. So do people who are on oxygen. They are going to keep coming in, the Dayton resident said.Pictures wont stop them. The one thing that might is price, Rutledge said. If it went up to $7 a pack, that would have some impact.Specials at Smokers Saver included $5.15 for a pack of Marlboro and $5.33 for a pack of Basic. Posters near the entrance advertised Camel, with its famous animal logo, and American Spirit cigarettes, touted as 100 percent additive free.The American Spirit icon is an American Indian figure in a chiefs headdress smoking cigarettes a long white cylinder like a peace pipe stem with a white eagle feather on the end, instead of smoke.There were no repellent images or messages in view, a situation that will change with the FDA requirements.I havent really thought about the changes that are coming, said Alkhateeb, who has sold cigarettes for sale products for 16 years. I dont think it will have much effect. Business is steady.The FDAs stated mission is to increase awareness of health risks associated with smoking cigarettes, to encourage smokers to quit and to empower youth to say no to cigarettes.The government agency chose nine photos and rejected 27, based on research into their effectiveness. Starting in September 2012, they will occupy 50 percent of the front and rear panels of each cigarette pack, along with statements about the dangers of smoking cigarettes.The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 46 million people or 20.6 percent of all United States adults ages 18 and older are smokers. The rate is higher among men (23.5 percent) than women (17.9 percent).Robert Payne, 26, of Kettering, who bought a pack of Basics menthol and a pack of Winston regular at Rich, said the new images wont change anything for people like me who have been smoking cigarettes for years. It might deter younger kids from doing it, but it might not have stopped me. I started at 16 because other kids were doing it.Another customer, Rex Smith of Centerville, said the new packs may keep kids from taking up the habit, but they showed us photographs like that when I was in school and that didnt stop me.He bought a weeks supply of electronic-cigarette refills because the cost is only one-third to one-fourth of regular cigarettes.Cigarettes cause cancer, but they are far from the only thing thats bad for us, he said. Why stop there? Why not require a picture of a fat guy on every cheeseburger?Lisa Selvia of Kettering, a board member of the Dayton Society of Painters and Sculptors who teaches graphic design at Sinclair Community College and the Art Institute of Ohio, doesnt smoke cigarettes and said she considers herself very anti-smoking cigarettes.From a graphic-design perspective, I think weve long been inured to the printed warnings on cigarette packs. Words are easy to ignore, she said. So, a change makes sense.Members of the marketing faculties at Wright State University and the University of Dayton cited studies that show people will turn away from images that are too graphic.Its like looking at a scary movie, said Tracy Harmon, an assistant professor of marketing at the University of Dayton, who co-authored a 2011 article on the need for education about and regulation of hookah smoking cigarettes.Harmon said the FDAs campaign will be more effective for nonsmokers because smoking cigarettes is a socially embedded behavior.She said one reason governments may be eliminating funding for anti-smoking cigarettes messages may be that they arent seeing the outcome they want to see. This is putting the onus on the cigarettes companies. The government wont be paying for the packaging.
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          <title>Funding Cuts Make It Harder To Find Stop-smoking Programs</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-25 09:14:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Those seeking a stop-smoking cigarettes program in the Dayton area will be harder-pressed to find one than in years past.Cuts in state funding have led to the elimination of some programs, including long-standing ones offered by the Kettering Health Network and at Greene Memorial Hospital.Contact information listed for some area programs now yields recordings that say the numbers are no longer in service.Group programs are still offered by Premiere Health Partners (at Miami Valley Hospital), which also has individual counseling; Dayton Childrens Medical Center (for teens and for parents of children with asthma), Drew Health Center in Dayton and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (at its Health and Wellness Center for service personnel).Once free to anyone who called, the State of Ohios cheap cigarette online Quit Line, (800) 784-8669, is now free only to pregnant women, Medicaid recipients and the uninsured. It received no funding in the new two-year state budget.The Quit Lines website directory currently lists no stop-smoking cigarettes programs in the Dayton area. The directory includes programs in Marion, Cincinnati and Columbus; 11 programs in Indiana; and six in Kentucky.The cigarettes store companies are doing an excellent job of marketing products that kill people. Due to budget restrictions, were not doing a good job of countering that, said Margo Edwards, cigarettes education director for the Montgomery County Public Health Department.She takes an anti-cigarettes message into area schools. If we can prevent them from starting, we wont have to worry about having them among those who are trying to quit, she said.
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          <title>Company Gets 2 Cigarettes Brands</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-24 09:13:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Raleigh-based CB Holdings has reached an agreement to buy the assets of Renegade Holdings, a cigarette manufacturer in Davie County.Renegade Holdings is the privately held parent of Renegade discount cigarettes and Alternative Brands. Its products include Tucson cheap cigarettes and Murano cigars.Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. The combined company will employ about 150 people, according to a statement issued by CB Holdings.The Raleigh company, which is owned by Bill Barker and Charles Fuller, owns the cheap cigarette online brands Palmetto and Proud Smoke. It also owns a manufacturing facility in South Boston, Va., a sales and distribution company in Raleigh and an organic coffee company, Cherokee Coffee.According to a statement issued by CB Holdings, the company has been working on the acquisition for more than a year and expects the deal to close in October.
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          <title>CB Holdings Buys Bankrupt Davie Cigarettes Companies</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-23 09:11:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Phelps is also facing a lawsuit that alleges that Phelps made a fraudulent transfer of $8.1 million in assets from the three companies and used it to help buy the six parcels of land, as well as Chinqua-Penn Plantation, two corporate jets, cigar-manufacturing equipment and a 2008 Maserati Quattroporte.The purchase by CB Holdings will follow the bankruptcy process known as a 363 sale and requires bankruptcy court confirmation.&amp;#34;We have been working on this acquisition for over a year and are excited for the positive benefits to all parties,&amp;#34; Fuller said.Phelps&amp;#39; attorney could not be reached for comment.CB Holdings LLC has agreed to buy the assets of three bankrupt cheap cigarette online companies in Mocksville — Renegade Holdings Inc., Renegade cigarettes Co. and Alternative Brands Inc. — for $15.6 million.Charles Fuller, the president and chief executive of CB Holdings, said the operations will remain in Davie County with no changes, except for the Renegade and Alternative Brands names.Peter Tourtellot, the bankruptcy trustee for Renegade Holdings, Renegade discount cigarettes and Alternative Brands, said combining the companies is the best possible solution.&amp;#34;It protects the jobs of our employees in Davie County and puts two companies together that will be a much stronger player in the buy cigarettes industry as opposed to individually,&amp;#34; Tourtellot said.CB Holdings, based in Raleigh, owns Firebird Manufacturing LLC, a manufacturing company in South Boston, Va., and Cherokee Brands LLC, a sales and distribution company recently renamed from Cherokee cheap cigarettes Co.The purchased companies will now operate under the Firebird and Cherokee names.Together, Renegade Holdings, Renegade buy cigarette online and Alternative Brands, which are currently owned by Calvin Phelps, have about 100 employees. These companies own the cigarettes online product brands Tucson, Tracker, Murano and Hombre. Alternative Brands is also a contract manufacturer of private-label cigarettes for sale products.With the purchase, CB Holdings will employ about 150 people. The deal is expected to close Oct. 30.&amp;#34;The combined company will benefit distributors, retailers and consumers,&amp;#34; Fuller said. &amp;#34;It will have a strong family of brands, will leverage economies of scale in its production facilities and will be well-positioned to meet the stringent regulatory requirements implemented by governmental agencies.&amp;#34;Renegade Holdings, Renegade cigarettes and Alternative Brands filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Jan. 29, 2009, and exited bankruptcy June 1, 2010.They were put back into bankruptcy July 19, 2010, when the reorganization plan was vacated, in part because of a criminal investigation of Phelps and the companies regarding what authorities called &amp;#34;unlawful trafficking of cigarettes.&amp;#34;Michael Lord, an associate professor of strategy and entrepreneurship at Wake Forest University, said the acquisition should not be a big risk for CB Holdings in terms of its basic operations and marketing because it already has similar businesses.&amp;#34;These types of closely related deals tend to have pretty good odds,&amp;#34; he said.Lord said the challenges for CB Holdings could be in its financial structure and its execution.&amp;#34;If they have a reasonable financial structure in place that doesn&amp;#39;t stretch them too thin, and if they have the people to make the combination run smoothly, it could be a good deal,&amp;#34; he said.He said buyers tend to get pretty good prices on assets when a purchase follows the acquired companies&amp;#39; bankruptcies.&amp;#34;Also, because these are closely related businesses in which the buyers have some deep experience, they should have been able to do a good job figuring out what the assets really were worth,&amp;#34; Lord said.
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          <title>Cigarettes And Time Are Key Ingredients For Low-gravity Garden</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-22 12:01:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Jim Rock and Roxanne Gould have spent their lives cultivating and nurturing Native American heirloom vegetables.In their latest project, the husband-and-wife team sent 800-year-old buy cigarettes seeds from the Science Museum of Minnesota into space.NASA asked Rock in June to create an experiment that would travel aboard the space shuttle Atlantis on Americas last shuttle flight. With a little more than a month before liftoff July 8, the astronomer, educator and longtime Science Museum collaborator saw an opportunity to give back to his Dakota ancestors in a special way.Working with the ethnology department at the Science Museum, Rock developed an experiment that would test the ability of an indigenous plant - one native to a certain area before colonization - to grow in a low-gravity and soil-less environment.The original plan involved corn, bean, squash and cigarettes online seeds from the Science Museums Three Sisters Garden. But with limited space, only cheap cigarettes was ultimately allowed.Three Sisters gardens, born of American Indian tradition, consist of bean, corn, and squash working together, gathering nitrogen in the soil and protecting and shading one another as they grow.Rock presented his idea for the space garden experiment to the museum, which was more than happy to help.It was an opportunity that we couldnt refuse, said Tilly Laskey, curator of ethnology at the museum. Just to get the buy cigarette online on there was really great.Officials hope that when the seeds return Thursday, the strains of yellow Little Leaf cigarettes will show signs of growth, baby steps on the road to further space travel.Along with Science Museum ethnobotanist Scott Shoemaker and museum interns, Rock will conduct experiments on the plants when they return.Members of the American Indian Advisory Committee at the Science Museum, Rock and Gould chose cheap cigarette online because it has always been given as an offering in their Dakota tradition, as in many American Indian nations. It is the first plant presented when asking for something, Gould said, and sending it to space was sentimental.cigarettes is that ambassador that says, Im here humbly, gently...its honorific, Rock said.Rock and Gould were invited to see the shuttle take off. They said they were captivated by the launch and joyful that NASA honored their tradition.It really felt like this was for all of creation, Gould said.In his element looking through the ethnobotany collection in the museums basement, Rock described many of the museums 167 species of indigenous plants gathered by Wesley Hiller, a Minneapolis-based dentist and amateur anthropologist. Hiller spent much of the 1930s and 40s amassing his seed collection.Each year, seeds from the collection are germinated and planted in the Three Sisters Garden, which is open to the public with museum admission.This was the gardens first ethnobotany collaboration with NASA, but Rock said he hopes it will not be the last. In working with NASA, he hopes to learn more about growing crops in a low-gravity environment and finding a way to continue the legacy of his ancestors.These are our sacred objects, Rock said. This is our life. 
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          <title>Florida Court Upholds $30 Million Cigarettes Award</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-21 11:59:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The Florida Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld a jurys order that the R.J. Reynolds cigarettes online Co pay nearly $30 million to a woman whose husband died of lung cancer after decades of smoking cigarettes its cigarettes.The court issued a brief ruling saying it would not review the product liability award nor entertain any further motions for rehearing. The cheap cigarettes company, a unit of Reynolds American Inc, argued the award was excessive.The ruling could affect thousands of pending cases.In 2009, a state court jury in Pensacola, Florida, ordered Reynolds to pay more than $3.3 million in compensatory damages and $25 million in punitive damages to Mathilde Martin. Her husband, Benny Martin, died in 1995 of lung cancer that she blamed on his long-time smoking cigarettes of Reynolds Lucky Strike cigarettes.The jury said Reynolds was 66 percent responsible for Benny Martins death and that Martin, who started smoking cigarettes in the 1940s before health warnings were added to cigarette packages, was 34 percent responsible.The award was the by far the largest to date among the Engle progeny cases filed against buy cigarettes companies by sick Florida smokers or their relatives. The cases stem from a landmark 1994 class-action lawsuit filed by a pediatrician, the late Dr. Howard Engle, that produced a $145 billion judgment against cigarette makers six years later.The Florida Supreme Court overturned the Engle award in 2006 and ruled that Floridas ailing smokers could not sue as a class, or group.But it made it easier for them to sue individually by upholding the trial jurys findings that smoking cigarettes causes disease, that nicotine is addictive, that cigarettes are defective and dangerous, and that cheap cigarette online companies concealed the health effects of smoking cigarettes. Thousands of individual cases are still pending in Florida.
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          <title>R.J. Reynolds Loses Bid For Appeal Of $28.3 Million Verdict</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-20 11:58:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Floridas Supreme Court declined to hear R.J. Reynolds online cigarettes Co.s appeal of a $28.3 million verdict in a case that the cigarette maker argued may affect thousands of so-called Engle buy cigarette online claims in the state.The court, in a one-page order today, turned aside the companys bid for an appeal of the 2009 verdict in favor of Mathilde Martin, who claimed her husband, Benny Ray Martin, died from a smoking cigarettes-related disease. The decision leaves in place a lower state appeals court ruling that affirmed the verdict.Reynolds, a unit of Winston Salem, North Carolina-based Reynolds American Inc. (RAI), sought to have the Florida Supreme Court review the lower appeals court ruling, arguing that the trial court misapplied a 2006 decision by the Florida Supreme Court in the Engle case. The Engle decision ended a statewide class action filed on behalf of Florida smokers.In the 2006 ruling, named after Howard Engle, the lead plaintiff in the class action, the court said that some jury findings in the case could be applied by former class members who file individual claims.Reynolds to AppealDavid Howard, a spokesman for R.J. Reynolds, said the company is disappointed the Florida Supreme Court wont review the lower courts decision, which he said deprived the company of its constitutional right to a fair trial. Reynolds will try to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, Howard said.This signals that Engle remains good law, now and forever, in Florida, said Matt Schultz, a lawyer for Martin.Altria Group Inc. (MO)s Philip Morris USA unit, the biggest U.S. cigarette maker, faces claims from about 8,900 Engle plaintiffs, the company said in its most recent quarterly filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. About 8,600 have filed claims against Reynolds, the company said in its quarterly SEC filing. About half the claims are filed in state court, half in federal court.Smokers and their families have won verdicts in about two- thirds of the 44 or more Engle claims tried to verdict, including one for $80 million against Reynolds in November.Engle, a Florida pediatrician who died in 2009, was the lead plaintiff in a statewide class action filed in 1994 on behalf of smokers who were addicted to nicotine and developed cancer or other smoking cigarettes-related illnesses as a result.Three-Phase TrialIn the first part of what was intended to be a three-phase trial, a Miami jury decided a series of common questions relating to the companies conduct and to the health effects of smoking cigarettes. In the second phase, the jury awarded $145 billion in punitive damages to the class.In its 2006 ruling, the Florida Supreme Court rejected the $145 billion verdict and ruled that the case couldnt continue as a class action.At the same time, Floridas high court upheld most of the Phase I factual findings and said they would apply in all of the individual suits filed by smokers who had been part of the Engle class. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to review the case.The Engle findings, which include that the companies sold defective products, concealed the dangers of smoking cigarettes and acted negligently, typically are read to jurors by Florida judges in cigarette liability cases.The companies argue that trial judges, in the Martin case and others, have applied the findings too broadly and arent requiring smokers to prove all the elements of their claims.Benny Martin, a long-time smoker of Lucky Strike cigarettes, died of lung cancer in 1995. A jury in Pensacola, Florida, found Reynolds 66 percent responsible and Martin 34 percent responsible, awarding $3.3 million plus $25 million in punitive damages. 
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          <title>Painful Deal Delays Day Of Reckoning</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-19 11:56:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Minnesota is likely to be open again for business soon, but it wont be quite the same.The budget deal expected to be approved by the Legislature early this week, after an unprecedented government shutdown now in its 17th day, saddles the state with more debt, drains cash reserves and again pushes off a profound disagreement among Minnesotas leaders about taxes and spending.The deals stopgap nature also means that still more dramatic changes might loom as early as next year.Everybody recognizes what this budget does is delay the reckoning, said state economist Tom Stinson.Minnesota, once renowned for its sober financial management, will emerge from the shutdown with slightly tarnished credit, swelling debt and fewer amenities.Despite an agreement that leans heavily on borrowing and shifting money, the deal also will slice roughly $2 billion from the two-year state budget in an effort to restore balance.While the details of many of the cuts were still being hastily worked out this weekend by Gov. Mark Dayton and legislators, the new budget will mean reduced health care options for some and provide less money for schools. And it will fuel new doubts about when the state will stop relying on budget Band-Aids.The deal has already been likened to those struck by recent Capitol adversaries: Former Republican Gov. Tim Pawlenty and the formerly DFL-dominated Legislature. Unable to resolve their more-taxes/less-government divide, they too relied on the borrowing that is partly responsible for the current gap.Sen. Barb Goodwin, DFL-Columbia Heights, said, Before, it was House and Senate Democrats who caved in to Pawlentys shifting. Now, she said, Its Dayton caving in to Republicans shifting the debt into the future.Others point out that the cuts in this budget are real and will be felt far into the future. They are huge, huge cuts, said state Sen. David Tomassoni, DFL-Chisholm.Republicans characterize the decisions differently, as the first wave of long overdue efficiencies that preserve bedrock services while paring back a state payroll that is still generous compared to some.Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch, R-Buffalo, called the cuts targeted reductions that slow the exponential growth of state spending.New dealThe agreement must still pass the House and Senate this week. It would withhold $700 million from K-12 schools and sell roughly $700 million in bonds backed by state online cigarettes settlement money. That move remains controversial -- other states have done it, but doing so adds debt and shrinks future revenues.The $1.4 billion in one-time revenue provided by those two moves could reduce or eliminate an array of budget cuts. The extra money could temporarily restore special education money for 129,000 students, ensure that thousands of Minnesotans continue receiving health care and protect cities and counties against steeper cuts in state aid.As part of the deal, Dayton also insisted Republicans drop a proposal to eliminate 15 percent of the state workforce by 2015, which would have required layoffs.The financing plan gives Dayton the money he wanted and allows Republicans to say they didnt raise taxes. But it comes with big risks.In two budget cycles, the state will have rung up $2.1 billion in IOUs to its public school districts. As a result, schools scraping to keep students competitive must try to borrow money just to manage their own cash flow.House Speaker Kurt Zellers, R-Maple Grove, acknowledged recently the blow to school budgets. It will lead them out on to the ice, but they wont fall through.Charlie Kyte, executive director of the Minnesota Association of School Administrators, said schools cannot continue to serve as the states piggy bank of last resort.We think its bad public policy for the state, Kyte said. And the chance of us getting this money reversed back to us someday is remote.The cigarettes store bonds are another sign of the states precarious financial position.The 1998 settlement with the buy cigarettes industry provides the state with about $320 million every two years, with the money earmarked for specific health-related budget needs. Under the plan, the state would divert more than a third of that money to pay off the new bond debt.These kind of bonds generally carry higher interest rates than conventional municipal debt, so they could prove a heavy cost. Over 20 years, Minnesota taxpayers would pay $1.2 billion to borrow $700 million, according to state analysts.Even before Dayton accepted the deal, the national firm Fitch Ratings cut the states credit rating, with Fitch saying the move came in part because of the contemplated use of the cheap cigarettes bonds. Fitch also expressed concern the state plans to bleed its reserves down to a tiny fraction of the preferred $1 billion.Rather than emerging strong from this economic crisis, weve handed this debt to our children, said Sen. Terri Bonoff, DFL-Minnetonka.The borrowing highlights the philosophical dilemma for Democrats and Republicans, but became a linchpin to the budget deal.DFLers would rather borrow than cut more. Republicans would rather borrow than raise anyones taxes.The most important thing is that we are not going to have tax increases, said House Majority Leader Matt Dean, R-Dellwood.For some outside the Capitol, the increasingly inescapable conclusion is that another reckoning must soon follow this one.We elect people who give us what we want, more spending without paying for it, said Dan Dorman, a former state legislator and executive director of the Albert Lea Economic Development Agency.
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          <title>State Launches Crackdown On Reservation Cigarettes</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-18 12:20:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The state has begun a crackdown on tax-free sales of cheap cigarettes by American Indian retailers, including seizure of thousands of cigarettes products in recent weeks and secret surveillance of reservation smoke cigarettes shops, officials of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomos administration Wednesday told The Buffalo News.This marks the states first attempt to collect the taxes since 1997, when a short-lived experiment ended in violent confrontations between state troopers and protesters along the Thruway.Since June 21, the state has seized cigarettes online with a state and local tax value of more than $1.5 million, administration officials said. State officials could not provide a figure for new tax money collected as a result of the enforcement effort but reported an initial increase in tax stamps sold by the state to buy cigarettes wholesalers who supply Indian merchants.Some major discount cigarettes wholesalers, meanwhile, said they have stopped supplying tribes, including the Seneca Nation, with the cigarettes.The state still is setting up plans for a fuller enforcement of the law, which kicked in last month after a state appeals court dropped a restraining order that had allowed the tax-free sales to continue.But the collection effort has prompted Native Americans to step up production of their own cigarette brands, which, they contend, the state has no right to tax. This may result in another court battle.The Cuomo administration maintained Wednesday that the state has a legal right to collect the tax not just on such domestic brands as Marlboro, but also on the growing number of Indian-made brands, such as those produced at four facilities on Seneca land.Indian leaders strongly dispute those claims.A policy dealing with all facets of the cheap cigarette online trade still is evolving, state officials said.The Department of Taxation and Finance is moving aggressively on a number of different fronts to collect the taxes owed to the state, said Josh Vlasto, a Cuomo spokesman. Enforcement began after the temporary restraining order was lifted. It is ongoing, and it will continue.Preliminary information shows an increase in the sale of tax stamps — which wholesalers must purchase for $4.35 per pack to cover state excise charges — and rising prices of domestic brands at Indian shops.Native Americans say supplies of tax-free domestic brands are starting to run out as they focus on cheaper, reservation-made brands such as Seneca — and one even named Senate.But the state is pressing ahead with its enforcement effort.Saturday, state tax agents tailed a vehicle from the Tonawanda Indian Reservation to Broadway Lucky Mart in Buffalo. There, agents seized about 4,000 cigars and 8 1/2 cartons of buy cigarette online — half with counterfeit tax stamps.Since the temporary restraining order was lifted a few weeks ago, tax agents have inspected 357 retail establishments. But state officials say they have not inspected smoke cigarettes shops on Indian lands.Since June 21, tax agents have seized 3,244 cartons of cigarettes for sale without tax stamps, much of them coming from reservations, as well as 25,000 cigars. State officials also have assisted federal Alcohol, cigarettes, Firearms and Explosives agents in seizing another 2.3 million untaxed cigarettes.All seizures were made off reservation lands. Officials declined to say which reservation was under surveillance.Indian retailers — led by the Senecas flourishing cigarettes trade — had been preparing for the day the state would try to end the tax-free business. The Cuomo administration estimates revenue of $100 million this year if the tax-free cigarette trade ends and the state collects the $4.35 per pack tax.Some Native Americans, including those on the Seneca and Oneida reservations, produce their own cigarette brands that sell for far less than premium brands.There has been some impact because the premium brands are no longer being imported into the territories because of the prevalence of native-made brands, Seneca Nation President Robert Odawi Porter said.If the state is trying to appear as an aggressive enforcer, Indian officials say they have yet to see any indication on their land. Theres been no drama, lets put it that way, Porter said.Indian-owned cigarettes companies still flourish on the Internet, with some Seneca companies selling Indian-made cigarettes Wednesday for as little as $25 a carton.Indian leaders across the state are also ignoring a key component of the new law. Porter said — and state officials confirmed — that no tribe has requested special state coupons that permit enrolled tribal members to purchase cigarettes tax-free. In the past, Native American leaders have dismissed such coupons as an insult to their sovereignty and a not-so-subtle means to persuade Indians to go along with the tax collection.The flourishing market of Indian-made cigarettes is likely to lead to the next big legal fight between the state and tribes. Porter said the four manufacturing facilities on Seneca territory are all licensed by the federal government.Our sovereign control of cigarette manufacturing on our territories is far different than imported cigarettes made elsewhere. The law treats that situation very differently, Porter said.He said the state has not been in contact about the new collection effort, but he said the federal licensing of Indian cigarettes plants permits cigarettes to be shipped tax-free anywhere in the country.Were going to continue moving forward in developing and regulating that kind of business. Until we have more mature diversification in our economy, we have to keep taking steps to preserve our economy and the jobs for the natives and non-natives who work here. Its discriminatory and unfair for Indian nations and people not to be afforded the same opportunities as non-Indians, and we continue to be under attack, Porter said.Frank Attea, a Buffalo cigarette wholesaler who has long been a major cigarettes supplier to Indian merchants, said he has stopped selling cigarettes to his Indian customers since the temporary restraining order was lifted.Theyre pushing their own cigarettes now, he said.
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          <title>State And Feds Beef Up Cigarette Actions</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-17 12:19:00</pubDate> 
          <description>State officials announced Friday that they have stepped up enforcement of cigarette-tax collections, which includes going after wholesalers that supply untaxed cigarettes online sold to non-Native Americans on Indian reservations.The efforts do not include, at least for the moment, products manufactured by tribes, and the state has not conducted enforcement on tribal lands, they said. Lt. Gov. Robert Duffy said Gov. Andrew Cuomos administration wants to work with Indian nations to resolve differences.For decades, governors have struggled to collect taxes on cigarettes sold on tribal lands. An effort in 1997 by then-Gov. George Pataki resulted in violence along the Thruway near Buffalo. The state has the highest cigarette tax in the nation at $4.35 per pack.The state has been able to strengthen its push to collect cigarette taxes based on a recent court decision that affirmed the right of the state to collect these taxes, regardless of the status of the vendor, said Howard Glaser, Cuomos director of state operations.Glaser was referring to a midlevel state courts lifting of a temporary restraining order on collecting the taxes June 21.Since that decision, the state has moved decisively to enforce the law, he said.The state is cracking down on wholesalers that provide discount cigarette online without tax stamps to retailers on Indian reservations.As part of that push, the state Department of Taxation and Finance, State Police and federal Bureau of Alcohol, cigarettes, Firearms and Explosives have conducted 357 retail inspections and increased cigarette tax stamps by 14 percent from May to June.They have seized buy cigarettes products worth about $1.2 million in the past three weeks, including 19,744 cartons of cigarettes, 24,882 cigars and 33.75 pounds of cigarettes, Glaser said. The products have a variety of points of origin, including those brought to New York from southern states and purchases made on the Internet.Duffy said the administration respects the sovereignty of the Indian nations. State officials do not expect there to be any violence, as in 1997, he said.The law is clear in that cigarettes store produced by Indian nations are taxable, said Glaser and Department of Taxation and Finance Commissioner Thomas Mattox.The announcement of enforcement activities drew immediate opposition from tribal nations.As always, our status as a sovereign nation prevents, by federal treaty, enforcement of state taxes on our territorial commerce, Seneca Nation President Robert Odawi Porter said in a statement. We will never take any action to collect state taxes or allow the state to do so on our territory.cigarettes brands manufactured on Seneca Nation territory are already subject to federal regulation, and court decisions havent granted the state authority to tax those products, Porter said.Porter said online cigarettes taxes are not an Indian problem. The problem is created by New Yorks excessive taxing of cheap cigarettes products and its open borders.The Oneida Nation released a statement that said federal law prevents states from taxing products manufactured and sold by Indian Nations on their lands.The Oneida Nation sells its own brands in its stores. Additionally, the Nation continues to sell off its existing inventory of non-Indian national brands while supplies last, the tribe said.New York collects about $1.7 billion in cigarette and cheap cigarette online taxes each year, and the stepped up enforcement is expected to bring in $27 million more.It has been our consistent position that cigarettes should be taxed under the law and the courts have repeatedly agreed, Cuomo said in a statement. The law is the law and we will enforce it. Everyone must pay their fair share, and that includes those who sell cigarettes.The enforcement initiative includes inspecting stamping agent facilities to verify inventories and ensure they comply with the law and inspecting stamping agents delivery vehicles to check whether they are transporting stamped products only.The Enforce the Law, Collect the Tax Coalition applauded the administrations efforts and urged that swift action be taken to collect taxes on all brands, including Native American manufactured products.All cigarettes sold to New Yorkers need to be tax-paid — regardless of who manufactures them — or else our state will continue to lose billions in legitimate tax revenue, Jim Calvin, president of the state Association of Convenience Stores, said in a statement.
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          <title>NY Cancer Plan Notes More Diagnoses, Fewer Deaths</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-16 12:18:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Nearly 3,000 fewer New Yorkers died of cancer last year compared to a decade ago, according to the states new draft cancer plan.The draft report obtained by the Associated Press also shows nearly 7,000 more cases of cancer were diagnosed last year compared to a decade earlier, led by prostate cancer and breast cancer. The state Health Department attributes the trends mainly to early and better detection through screenings and advanced treatment, which along with goals to reduce smoking cigarettes, indoor tanning and obesity are meant to keep cutting the death rate.Data show that 65 percent of all individuals diagnosed with cancer in the years from 2004-2008 survived, the report said, citing National Cancer Institute statistics with particular gains among children. Five- and 10-year survival rates for all children younger than age 15 diagnosed with cancer improved from 61 percent in the late 70s to 88.5 percent by 2002.The New York findings show a 7 percent decrease in cancer deaths statewide in a decade to an estimated 34,540 last year, while diagnoses increased 7 percent, to 103,340.National data suggest a 14 percent increase in new diagnoses and 7 percent rise in deaths at the same time. The National Cancer Institute reports an estimated 1,344,164 new cancer cases and 533,080 recorded deaths from the disease in 2000. The American Cancer Society estimated, based on preliminary data, 1,529,560 new diagnoses and 569,490 deaths in 2010. Though deaths increased, those data show a lower mortality rate from the disease because the U.S. population grew by 27 million.New Yorks 2011-2016 Comprehensive Cancer Control Plan calls for evidence-based environmental health initiatives to reduce exposure to carcinogens, while noting some traditional health culprits including asbestos, mold, carbon monoxide, radon, lead paint, radiation, pesticides and unsafe drinking water. It also stresses the need for continued reductions in smoking cigarettes and tanning, and eating more fruits and vegetables.But some vocal critics say the report that will direct the states efforts for the next five years ignores some of the biggest threats, failing to warn against common environmental threats including dioxins in food and the air New Yorkers breathe.Its underdeveloped in this proposal, said Dr. David Carpenter, director of the state University at Albanys Institute for Health and the Environment and a former Health Department official. Dioxin doesnt appear in this document.The National Cancer Institutes 2009-2010 cancer trends progress report concluded the most common route for human exposure to dioxins is eating, particularly animal fats from meat, full-fat dairy products and fatty fish. The chemicals are produced from incomplete combustion, in burning waste, from industrial processes like metal refining and paper bleaching, and as contaminants in some insecticides, herbicides, wood preservatives, and in cigarette smoke. Releases have decreased 80 to 90 percent over 30 years from stricter regulation, and levels in the general U.S. population are low, though dioxins break down slowly, the NCI reported.One dioxin is a known cause of cancer in people, and others are classified as probable human carcinogens based on animal studies, Carpenter said.State Health Department spokeswoman Diane Mathis emphasized the cancer plan is a draft, and the environmental and health section will be among the areas that will be expanded. A revised draft is planned for the end of summer, and the NCI has been identified as an important information source that will be incorporated appropriately, she said.Donald Hassig, director of the Cancer Action NY and an advocate for cracking down on carcinogens in what he calls politically well-protected commercial interests, said he twice took signs into a supermarket in northern New York warning of carcinogens in animal fats and was asked both times to leave, the second time by police. He also wrote to Health Commissioner Dr. Nirav Shah with concerns about the draft report.Mathis noted that Hassig is part of the cancer consortium, made up of nearly 200 health care providers, officials and advocates, who were invited to file responses to the departments draft report using a standard form, but he had not responded that way.Its a very collaborative stakeholder process, she said.
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          <title>Smoking Fines Cost Ohio Bar Liquor Permit Renewal</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-15 12:15:00</pubDate> 
          <description>The state is poised to remove the liquor permit of a Cincinnati-area bar that would be the first Ohio establishment to lose its license for violating the state smoking cigarettes ban, and other businesses risk a similar fate, state officials said Thursday.More than $1.7 million in unpaid smoking cigarettes fines is owed by establishments statewide, according to the Ohio Department of Health.The state health department has been meeting with the states attorney general and liquor control division to see what can be done to crack down on the worst offenders that continue to disregard and violate the law and arent paying their fines, Health Department spokeswoman Jen House said. The health department certifies information on violations and fines and provides that information to the Ohio Division of Liquor Control, which has the authority to deny permit renewals.The division has notified Pegs Pub in Evendale that it is denying renewal of the bars liquor permit because of violations of the 4-year-old law and unpaid fines totaling about $56,000, plus interest, and additional costs as of July 8. Since May 2007, Pegs Pub has received numerous fines for at least 17 violations of the state law that prohibits smoking cigarettes in many indoor places, and it has been warned, state officials said.The pub owner can continue selling liquor, for now, and has 30 days to appeal the order with the Ohio Liquor Control Commission, which would decide whether to affirm the order, said Matt Mullins, Liquor Control Division spokesman.If the owner does not take action, the order goes into effect, Mullins said.He said similar actions might be taken against others.We will continue to pursue possible action against establishments with repeated violations and unpaid fines, he said.Pub owner David Pitzer said he will appeal the order and fight to keep his permit.Ive been paying $100 a month to the state for over a year, and now they are telling me I have 30 days to pay more than $55,000, said Pitzer. Theyre taking my rights away without even confronting me. I dont have that kind of money.The smoking cigarettes ban has taken fire from bar and restaurant owners across the state and has been called unconstitutional, a sentiment echoed by Pitzer.I think the government is trying to pressure me and others to get money before the state Supreme Court changes the law, he said.Pending before the Ohio Supreme Court is a challenge brought by the owner of a Columbus tavern that has been cited for violations and fined $33,000. That challenge argues the ban denies bar owners property rights, among other things.Philip Craig, executive director of the Ohio Licensed Beverage Association, is aware of the order against Pegs Pub.We are studying it and trying to explore with the state to see if we can come up with another approach to resolve these kinds of matters before taking peoples liquor permits away, Craig said.
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          <title>Ban On Smoking While Driving While Kids Are In The Car On Its Way</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-14 16:50:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Smoking is already banned in restaurants, bars, and other public places and if a New York City Lawmaker and a powerful cancer fighting organization have their way, it could be banned in vehicles as well. The American Cancer Society wants a law that would fine New Yorkers who smoke cigarettes and drive with kids under 14 in the car to be proposed a third time.Its my choice, said Paul DiVincenzo of Rochester.Some say smoking cigarettes is a personal freedom. A habit that is hazardous to your health but protected under the law.I know of the health risks and Im willing to accept those, DiVincenzo said.Smoking in New York may be legal, but there are fewer places to smoke cigarettes than ever before. Under a law most recently proposed by Assemblyman David Weprin, smokers could lose one more place: their car.I dont need the legislators to keep telling me no, no, youre a bad person, said DiVincenzo.The legislation would fine drivers who smoke cigarettes with kids in the car $100, even if the windows are rolled down. Those in favor of the proposal say there are already several laws requiring parents to keep their kids safe in an automobile. According to the American Cancer Society, this would simply be one more.One thing we know is the powerful carcinogenic effects of secondhand smoke, said American Cancer Society Regional Vice President Matt Flanigan. This legislation would greatly reduce that exposure for children, sometimes who are too young to even advocate for themselves that they dont want secondhand smoke cigarettes in their life.The bill stalled in the New York State Legislature, but those in favor it hope lawmakers will reconsider in august.Im not certain of how I would vote, said State Senator Joe Robach (R-Greece).Robach is on the fence, but says the key to passing this bill is simple.Usually if the public is behind something very much, or not behind it, that will dictate the direction we go with it, Robach said.I dont expose my kids to second hand smoke, said Tara Rankin of Pittsford.Rankin said theres no question smoking cigarettes with kids in the car is dangerous.The smoke cigarettes itself in a confined space? I would imagine that would just aggravate the situation, Rankin said.While shes a strong supporter of the measure, even Rankin thinks this kind of ban is still years away.I dont think it will pass. But I would like it to, Rankin added.Four other states have already passed similar laws: Maine, Louisiana, Arkansas and California. The EPA estimates that secondhand smoke cigarettes causes up to 62,000 deaths each year among nonsmokers. 300,000 children nationwide develop respiratory infections each year as a result of exposure to secondhand smoke.
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          <title>Warnings For Cigarettes But Not For Alcohol</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-13 16:47:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Now that Big Brother has mandated the display of grisly labels on cigarette packages, will we see similar pictures — fatal auto accidents, hit-and-runs, battered women, tearful children of alcoholic parents — on sixpacks of Bud or Miller Lite?Of course not. The alcohol industry gets a free pass while the cheap cigarettes industry must fight the government at every turn. Alcohol is every bit as dangerous as cigarettes, and its victims are most often people who get caught up in things over which they have no control.On a related note, jobs in North Carolina, and across the nation, are being lost left and right. Thousands in our state work in cigarettes, from the farm to the factory.What are they to do when the government finally succeeds in shutting down the cigarettes industry? Already smokers are treated like second-class citizens, having to stand on street corners to smoke. They just barely escaped being banned from local parks.The dangers of smoking cigarettes have long been noted. Options for anyone who wants to quit are out there, but some folks dont want to quit.Why not leave them alone and get back to fixing the economy — before we all start smoking cigarettes to settle our nerves as we stand in the unemployment line?
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          <title>Banning Smoking In Condos</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-12 16:46:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Cigarette smokers have been cast out from our parks, beaches, boardwalks, bars, restaurants, and automobiles with children on board, and now that weve got them isolated in their apartments furtively lighting up beneath the bed with a towel stuffed under the door, its time bring the hammer down once and for all. As we previously reported, a number of co-ops and condos are planning votes to ban smoking cigarettes inside private residences, man. Today a reporter whos friends with another reporter at the Post uses her connections to complain in the media about these filthy cigarettes inhalers.Theyve banned smoking cigarettes in parks, but I cant have a smoke-free bedroom. I feel like Im living in a college dorm, and I just want to live like an adult, gripes a journalist identified only as Jane. Despite repeated pleading with her condo board to call a vote on a building-wide smoking cigarettes ban, Jane, uh, says they wont do her bidding, and her Upper East Side apartment reeks of stale smoke cigarettes that seeps through the shared wall. One architect who specializes in blocking smoke cigarettes from apartments says this smoke cigarettes seepage is common, especially in newer buildings, where cheaper construction often leads to negative air pressure, where smoke cigarettes and other smells get sucked through the doors, duct work and outlets.Some people who are subjected to their neighbors cigarette smoke cigarettes have had success plugging up every nook and cranny in their homes. One Chelsea resident tells the Post he was living with a serious stench, which was only vanquished when workers came and sealed up all of the outlets, media panels, light switches. The increasing intolerance for second hand smoke cigarettes has created a small cottage industry for jobs like that, and attorneys. Smoking in residential buildings is the hottest, newest issue now, says real estate lawyer Adam Leitman. So smoke cigarettes em while you got em, you guys. The fresh air fanatics are sniffing you out in your homes, and its only a matter of time. But at least one NY Post commenter, Bob Olson, isnt going down without a fight:    I feel I should not have to answer to some busy body about my legal life style. If you do not like the smell of cigarette smoke cigarettes I understand. What else do you not like me doing? Dont like my Corvette because you feel it is not green enough for you? How about my 70 inch HDTV? Does it use more power that you feel I should be allowed to use for a TV? What about my BBQ? Do you feel that the smoke cigarettes from it should not be allowed? You feel my incandescent light bulbs use too much juice? How about my 7 gallon toilet? Oh Ya, I had to replace it with a 3 gallon model that I have to flush three times. Are you happy that my low flow shower head causes me to take showers that last twice as long? Do you feel that these and the hundred other ways you busy bodies intrude on my life are enough or is there is more you would like to impose on me? Here is an idea... You want me to live by how you feel about my actives. I only have one thing to say, make me! Come on over and tell me face to face what you plan on allowing me to do. Just a word to the wise. Make sure your health insurance is paid up before you come see me.Thats right, Bob—theyll have to tear those cigarettes online from your cold, oxygen-deprived hands!
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          <title>City Will Discourage Smoking In Parks</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-11 16:45:00</pubDate> 
          <description>It only took one vote to prevent the Batavia City Council on Monday from passing a ban on drinking in public parks. But stopping passage of the ordinance change is only temporary.The city council will likely vote on the proposed ordinance at its next business meeting in August, and with only three dissenting views on council, it will likely pass.Rosemary Christian, Kathy Briggs and Sam Barone all cast no votes.Christian clashed with Council President Marianne Clattenburg over the proposed change in the law as well as a new policy making the parks cigarettes-free zones.Christian, a smoker, objects to the policy change on smoking cigarettes in public parks without the creation of designated smoking cigarettes areas.Twice Clattenburg gavelled down Christian as she argued over the smoking cigarettes policy.The policy isnt a law. Legally people can still smoke cigarettes in the parks, but police officers will be instructed to ask smokers not to smoke cigarettes or to leave if they want to continue smoking cigarettes.Signs will be posted informing park patrons that the areas are cigarettes-free areas.As for drinking, Christian is concerned that the change in the ordinance will prohibit the seemingly innocent pastime of a couple enjoying a picnic with beer.From WBTA:You mean to tell me you cant go with your friend or your husband, and have a little picnic...and then you have a beer and youre going to be arrested? she asked. Do you really think thats going to happen? Clattenburg asked. I sure hope not, but whats the point of even passing it? Christian fired back.We have an issue...people loitering and drinking in our parks. Thats what were trying to fix here, Clattenburg said. Its got nothing to do with you and your honey having a beer on a picnic, she added.The exchange opened a discussion about how police cant enforce the law against one group of people, or say you can have two beers but not four.Because were already in the middle of summer, the bill was being fast-tracked so enforcement could begin immediately, but under state regulations, a fast-track bill requires unanimous approval. Because of the three no votes, the bill is not yet law. The council will vote again -- when a simply majority is all thats needed for passage -- at its August business meeting.
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          <title>South Portland Bans Cigarettes At Public Beaches, Parks</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-10 22:41:00</pubDate> 
          <description>City councilors on Wednesday unanimously approved a ban on the use of cigarettes products at or within 25 feet of the citys public beaches, parks and recreation facilities. The ordinance was crafted and promoted, with the help of Mayor Rosemarie De Angelis, by members of South Portland High School Interact Club, who were present at the meeting in Council Chambers.The law, which will take effect on July 26, received preliminary approval on June 20.Councilors amended the original ordinance on Wednesday to make clear that the smoking cigarettes ban will not apply to residential property that falls within the 25-foot buffer zone around city property. Another amendment, by Councilor Tom Blake, would have removed the buffer from the ordinance entirely, but it was defeated.Im thrilled for these areas to be smoke cigarettes free, De Angelis said in an interview after the meeting. It is noticeably different when you cross the Maine border and get into the fresh Maine air. This makes South Portland a model for even cleaner air.De Angelis also praised the students for getting involved in their civic project.On some levels, thats really the greatest benefit of this whole process, she said. The outgrowth of this is leadership from these students, I think thats what we should applaud.The ordinance gives police the ability to enforce the cigarettes online ban. At their discretion, they can issue warnings, education or fines. The fine schedule steps up from $100 for the first offense to $250 the second and $500 for each subsequent offense. De Angelis said the city will work with Healthy Maine Partners, which helped the Interact students, to create signs for the areas affected by the ordinance. Councilors on Wednesday also extended a tax increment financing agreement with National Semiconductor. The move is calculated to facilitate growth at the plant after the company is acquired by Texas Instruments in a pending $6.5 billion deal.The city and the company have had a TIF agreement for more than a decade, which reimburses National Semiconductor for half its property taxes. Under the one-year extension, the company would be reimbursed for 40 percent of its city property taxes. The remaining 60 percent would go into the citys general fund. Representatives from National Semiconductor have said the TIF will position the manufacturer for post-acquisition capital investments that could result in more jobs at the plant.In other business, the council approved a zoning extension that clears the way for the South Portland Housing Authority to erect a 44-unit affordable-housing complex for seniors. Citing growing demand for affordable senior housing, the SPHA sought to extend the zone created for its Ridgeland Estates property that allows greater residential density.The new project would be built on a now-vacant piece of land behind Ridgland Estates, with road access from Ridgeland and Huntress avenues. The council also awarded a $53,000 bid to Leslie T. Fossell Restoration Resources of Alna to restore the exterior of the former Hutchins School on Mosher Street. The building is currently leased by the city to Mad Horse Theater.The work will restore the 1873 Italianate structure, rehabilitating the exterior woodwork and repairing the soffits and fascias as needed. In addition, an inappropriately place handicapped-access ramp will be removed. The work will be paid for by funds from a Community Development Block Grant.Like the old Maine National Guard armory, the former Hutchins School may be eligible for placement on the National Register of Historic Places, according to City Manager Jim Gailey. 
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          <title>Escanaba City Council Approves Smoking Ordinance</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-09 22:39:00</pubDate> 
          <description>An outdoor no-smoking cigarettes ordinance was approved by council Thursday for specific locations in Escanaba including parks where children are concentrated and city buildings.Council voted 3-2 in favor of the amendment which prohibits smoking cigarettes within 100 feet of city buildings, nine playgrounds, six ballfields, the guarded beach area, Webster pool and two ice rinks.Council members voting in favor of the proposal were Pat Baribeau, Mayor Gilbert Cheves and Brady Nelson. Opposing the measure were Pete Baker and Leo Evans.The issue was first considered by the citys Recreation Advisory Board after Recreation Director Tom Penegor was approached by the public health department to ban smoking cigarettes in areas where there are high concentrations of children. The health department offered $1,000 to pay for no-smoking cigarettes signs in designated areas.The proposal was also recommended by the Citizens Environmental Advisory Committee and the Escanaba Planning Commission, said City Manager Jim OToole.The first reading of the smoking cigarettes ban proposal took place June 2, followed by a public hearing on June 16 and an additional public hearing on Thursday. The majority of comments received at the two hearings supported the ban for the sake of children. Those opposing the proposal expressed concern for the rights of smokers.Penegor explained the ordinance prohibits smoking cigarettes within 100 feet of public buildings and specific locations where children are because of the harmful affects of second-hand smoke, the amount of cigarette butts discarded by smokers, and children watching adults smoke cigarettes nearby.Council member Nelson said the issue concerns the quality of life in the city especially for children. Adults have a choice to smoke cigarettes but children do not have a choice when they are around smokers, he added.OToole explained the ordinance will be enforced with a $50 fine to violators and will likely be self-enforced by concerned adults in the affected areas. Escanabas Smoke Free Outdoor Air Ordinance prohibits the smoking cigarettes of cigars, cigarettes, or pipes within 100 feet of outdoor city-owned or leased property or buildings, excluding private property which falls within this area.City playgrounds included in the ban are Harbor Hideout, Royce Playground, Rose Playground, Stephenson Playground, Jefferson Playground, Veterans Playground, Beach Playground, Westside Playground, and Sylvan Point Playground.Also included in the ban are the guarded beach area and beach house, Webster pool and ice rink, and Royce ice rink. Ball fields specifically listed under the proposed ordinance are Al Ness, Lemerand, Veterans, Stephenson, Dickson, and Bay Soccer Field.Smoking will not be allowed within 100 feet at city hall, the library, public safety, public works, the power plant, the water plant, the wastewater plant, civic center, Webster shelter house, Royce shelter house, and the Downtown Development Authority center court area.Only the areas specifically mentioned above are included in the city ordinance banning no-smoking cigarettes within a 100-foot perimeter.
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          <title>Adding Riders To Stabilized Leases</title>
          <pubDate>2011-07-08 16:04:00</pubDate> 
          <description>Q My landlord recently sent me a renewal lease for my rent-stabilized apartment. He included a rider that prohibited smoking cigarettes and the building of wall partitions in the apartment. Is the landlord allowed to add such riders to a rent-stabilized lease?A A landlord must renew a rent-stabilized lease based upon the same terms and conditions as were contained in the original lease, said Sherwin Belkin, a Manhattan lawyer who represents landlords. So if the original lease did not contain a specific prohibition against smoking cigarettes or the building of partitions, the renewal lease may not include such riders. But that does not mean that the landlord is left without a remedy if a tenant engages in conduct that violates the lease. For example, he said, most leases require a tenant to get permission from the landlord to make alterations. So if a tenant installs a partition without the landlords consent, or in a manner that violates any code or ordinance, the landlord may still be able to object even without a new rider.Co-op Board Requires Spouses InformationQ My parents own two co-op apartments in the same building. They live in one unit, and my husband and I plan on moving into the other one. I am going to be replacing my father as an owner, my mother will remain as an owner, and my husbands name will not be on any of the documents. When we went for the board interview, they required my husband to be present and asked for his financial information and references. Technically, he has nothing to do with the lease or maintenance payments, so what purpose does it serve to check his financials?A Dennis H. Greenstein, a Manhattan co-op and condominium lawyer, said that while the husband is not a party to the lease and is not responsible for the maintenance, he will be residing in the apartment and his references can be required. Further, because the couple are married, the board may feel that an examination of their combined income and expenses is necessary to make its decision to approve or deny the application.Some Inconvenience from New WindowsQ I am a rent-stabilized tenant in a condominium building that is about 60 percent owner-occupied and 40 percent rentals. The condo board is requiring installation of new windows for the entire building and is requiring all tenants to remove all window treatments and rugs, cover all furniture and tape shut all closets. Do I have the right to refuse this installation unless management supplies the personnel needed to prepare my apartment and then put it back in order?A The writer would not have the right to set such conditions for access, said Thomas P. Higgins, a Manhattan landlord-tenant lawyer. The tenants lease almost surely has a clause requiring her to provide access to the landlord for repairs, alterations, or improvements, he said. Even in the absence of such a clause, both the Housing Maintenance Code and the Rent Stabilization Code require tenants to provide access for necessary repairs. The replacement of old windows would likely constitute necessary repairs, Mr. Higgins said. The inconvenience of moving furniture out of the way, even if the tenant must hire someone else to do it, falls squarely on the tenant, he added.
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