No action at all this week since the Council is finishing its two-week summer break. City Council members will return to business on Tuesday, September 2.
No action at all this week since the Council is finishing its two-week summer break. City Council members will return to business on Tuesday, September 2.
Posted by Rich Perelman on August 31, 2008 at 11:25 PM in Developments | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
No action this week (August 25-29) since the City Council is on hiatus; Council business will resume on Tuesday, September 2.
Several of the Council members are in Denver for the Democratic National Convention (most are Democrats); it’s worth wondering how many were at the Distilled Spirits Council party last night smoking Rocky Patel cigars?
If you would like to tell Councilman Bernard Parks or other members of the Council what you think of Parks's motion, check out this flyer we prepared for Cigar Rights of America here.
Posted by Rich Perelman on August 26, 2008 at 01:37 PM in Developments | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
The City's Chief Legislative Analyst filed a report on the Bernard Parks' Resolution to urge the County of Los Angeles to ban smoking everywhere in the County (Council file no. 08-002-S5130).
The report does not make a recommendation concerning the Resolution itself; it provides background on City smoking bans and on what other cities in Los Angeles County have done on the issue.
The Resolution currently sits in the Rules & Government Committee awaiting further action. The text of the CLA Report is here.
Posted by Rich Perelman on August 20, 2008 at 10:31 AM in Developments | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
The following editorial was submitted to the L.A. Business Journal on August 19; there is no guarantee of publication, of course, but it notes how Councilman Bernard Parks’ request for a ban on outdoor smoking follows a past, failed course of action:
PROHIBITION FAILED ONCE, IT WILL FAIL AGAIN
American philosopher George Santayana’s famed observation in Reason in Common Sense that "Those who cannot remember the past are doomed to repeat it" was penned more than 100 years ago. Los Angeles City Councilman Bernard Parks has shown that he has either forgotten it or prefers to ignore it.
On August 8, Parks introduced a motion in the City Council asking the City Attorney to draw up an ordinance that would ban smoking in all public places where people would gather, including the common areas of apartment buildings. He says his proposal wouldn’t ban smoking per se, but would eliminate most of the negative effects of smoking on the public.
In other words, he’s in favor of Prohibition, but this time of tobacco.
It didn’t work with alcohol and it won’t work with smoking, either.
The 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, ratified in 1920, didn’t ban the consumption or possession of alcoholic beverages. Instead, it stated that "the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes is hereby prohibited."
Instead of eliminating drinking, it sent it underground, fostered the manufacture of "bathtub gin" and other substitutes that were often much more dangerous than the liquors it replaced, and jump-started the formation of organized crime on a national basis. Prohibition was such a failure that it is the only amendment to the Constitution to be repealed, in 1933.
Parks claimed in an editorial on the CityWatchLA.com Web site that his proposal wouldn’t impact the police, but who’s going to hand out tickets or make arrests of smokers who light up on the street, in a parking lot or walking into their own apartment? At the current level of 9,600 sworn officers and an estimated 384,000 City residents who smoke – not even counting an additional several hundred thousand who work in the City – there would be an average of one officer for every 40 smokers. Tracking smokes down should keep our police pretty busy and eliminate the time spent on less-important efforts such as gang intervention, traffic control, drug interdiction, burglary, robbery, rape and murder.
Prohibition is bad policy and the criminalization – if Parks has his way – of up to 998,000 people in Los Angeles County is bad politics. If Parks wants to eliminate smokers from hanging around in front of buildings or on street corners, smoking lounges should be authorized – with blacked-out windows – where those who smoke can go to consume a legal product, hidden away from the non-smoking majority.
But then, we would have learned from history instead of trying Prohibition again, a century after the first try failed.
Posted by Rich Perelman on August 19, 2008 at 11:31 PM in Commentaries | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
As of Friday, August 15, the Motion to ban smoking throughout all public areas in the City of Los Angeles and the Resolution to urge the County of Los Angeles to do the same has only been referred to Council committees and neither has been placed on an agenda.
What can you do right now?
At this point, expressing your outrage over these items directly to Councilman Bernard Parks is the most appropriate. The e-mail address of his office is:
or you can register your displeasure by telephone at (213) 473-7008. Please be respectful! Nasty messages do not register well with City Council members; they only make them more determined.
Tell Councilman Parks - in your own words - to withdraw his second-hand smoke Motion and Resolution because - pick your reasons:
Please give your name and where you live, especially if you live, do business or have friends or relatives in Southern California, where this legislation will have impact. Tell your friends.
Further action will be needed, but as of August 15, it’s the first step.
Posted by Rich Perelman on August 15, 2008 at 12:05 AM in What You Can Do | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
The City of Los Angeles has a very efficient tracking system that allows "outsiders" to track actions on each legislative item which runs through the City Council called the "City File Management System" or CFMS.
The two Bernard Parks-introduced, anti-smoking measures can be tracked by using their file numbers:
(1) Motion for a City ordinance against secondhand smoke (introduced 8/8/08): 08-2123
(2) Resolution for the County to adopt a simiar measure (introduced 8/8/08): 08-0002-S130
You can track the progress of these items right along with us by using the CFMS to obtain an RSS feed or daily e-mail alert every time an action is taken on either of these items. Just enter the file numbers in the "Search" list and then choose which feed option you prefer at the top of the page.
Posted by Rich Perelman on August 13, 2008 at 04:07 PM in Developments | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
I sent the following commentary to the Los Angeles Times Op-Ed section on Tuesday, August 12; it is unknown if they will use it:
I’M A SMOKER, NOT A CRIMINAL
by Rich Perelman
Who does Los Angeles City Councilman Bernard Parks think he’s kidding?
Trailing State Senator Mark Ridley-Thomas in the November race for County Supervisor, Parks has decided to garner public attention by making criminals out of about 384,000 citizens of the City of Los Angeles and 989,000 in the County of Los Angeles.
He wants to ban smoking essentially anywhere. On street corners, on the sidewalk, anywhere you can think of on public property.
In an August 12 editorial on the CityWatchLA.com Web site, Parks demonstrated his complete disregard for anything close to the truth about smoking in his very first sentence:
"Secondhand smoke is the number one cause of preventable health disease in America. There are no questions regarding the negative health effects. Research has shown that inhaling secondhand smoke is more harmful than actually smoking, primarily due to the unfiltered nature of the smoke and its having been cooled by the air."
Let’s give Parks the benefit of the doubt and simply assume he hasn’t read the research. As the editor of CigarCyclopedia.com, a site about cigars that drew 1.6 million visits in 2007, I follow smoking legislation and research closely. There is no research anywhere that cites secondhand smoke – especially in outdoor settings – as anything close to the health risk of direct smoking. In fact, the chemical nature of so-called environmental tobacco smoke is considerably diluted with exposure to outdoor air and wind. Perhaps Mr. Parks just made this up for effect.
He can color this any way he wants, but simple mathematics show that his proposal tells almost a million people in Los Angeles County that they are subject to criminal penalties because they enjoy a legal product: tobacco.
Even some anti-tobacco advocates sees this kind of legislation as counter-productive and silly. Dr. Michael Siegel, a professor in the Boston University School of Public Health and a long-time supporter of indoor smoking bans, is dead-set against outdoor bans and he explains why in a recent blog entry about a similar ban in tobaccoanalysis.blogspot.com:
"There is clearly no need to ban smoking in every outdoor location in a city in order to protect nonsmokers from the hazards of tobacco smoke exposure. Banning smoking on every street and in every sidewalk, alley and parking lot is simply not justified by any science which demonstrates that exposure to secondhand smoke in these locations represents a significant public health problem."
He also notes that the same justifications used "to ban smoking in virtually all outdoors locations could also be used to ban the consumption of fatty foods in public, or even to ban obese people from public places."
Perhaps the svelte Mr. Parks has these in mind as well.
Parks claims in his editorial, "This is not a request that will drain law enforcement resources but primarily would be a code enforcement activity via either an infraction or misdemeanor." This is, in my view, simply a lie, since Parks – for 36 years a member of the Los Angeles Police Department and chief from 1997-2002 – knows that enforcement of infractions and misdemeanors is done by the Los Angeles Police Department and then prosecuted by the already-overloaded City Attorney’s Office. Isn’t their time better spent continuing their efforts to fight violent crime, gang activities and enforcing existing Municipal Code prohibitions against graffiti and drug use?
If this ordinance passes, how can police patrols even consider doing anything else than make arrests or issue citations any time they see two or more people smoking on the street? Or will they simply ignore it and leave this law either unenforced or enforced only on a random basis?
Parks is wrong when he says that outdoor secondhand smoke is a serious health threat. It is not.
If he wants to help smokers quit, the city can provide free counseling and anti-tobacco education. If he wants to take smoking off of the streets, then the establishment of specific, adults-only facilities – with blackened windows – for tobacco smoking should be licensed where those who wish to indulge are welcome and those who do not want to be around tobacco smoke can stay away.
But to pander to the non-smoking population and say that people who consume a legal product are criminals smacks of a return to widespread, government-enforced discrimination that should never even be contemplated in a society supposedly built on individual freedoms and tolerance.
Councilman Parks, please withdraw your motion, now.
Posted by Rich Perelman on August 12, 2008 at 09:49 PM in Commentaries | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
In the wake of the August 8 request by Los Angeles City Councilman Bernard Parks to ban all outdoor smoking in both the City and County of Los Angeles, the South Bay Daily Breeze, which covers the Torrance, Long Beach and San Pedro areas fired back with this editorial entitled "Cut smokers some slack" on Sunday, August 10:
"Someone tell Los Angeles City Councilman Bernard Parks that it's time for a cease-fire in the War on Smoking.
"Yes, smoking is a terrible, costly, self-destructive habit. And yes, society should do whatever it reasonably can to dissuade people from lighting up. But the smoking ban that Parks is calling for in the city of Los Angeles steps clear into the realm of the unreasonable.
"Parks, who is vying in a fall runoff campaign to succeed retiring Second District Supervisor Yvonne Burke, also wants the county Board of Supervisors to adopt a similar anti-smoking plan. Parks would like to see the policy enacted by all the cities in the county.
"In the wake of the comprehensive ban on public smoking that Calabasas enacted in 2006, Parks now wants L.A. to ban smoking pretty much anywhere non-smokers may be present - which is to say, everywhere.
"‘Smoke has no boundaries,’ Parks says. ‘You should smoke only where you are hurting only yourself.’ He adds, ‘We're not trying to get into people's bedrooms and homes.’
"The problem is, those two comments are contradictory.
"Parks is right: Smoke does have no boundaries. That's true even for cigarette smoke that wafts from one's front porch into a neighbor's yard. Once the law protects non-smokers from ever having to sniff even a microscopic trace of smoke, it must necessarily intrude into people's homes - or bedrooms, should the window be open.
"That's legal overkill.
"While secondhand smoke can be dangerous, especially in large amounts, that's simply not the case with the fumes from a smoker who just so happens to be walking by outdoors. In L.A., a pedestrian walking on the sidewalk has far more to fear from the exhaust of passing cars than from the lingering residue of a fellow pedestrian's cigarette.
"L.A. is a city that prides itself on its tolerance. City residents could do a little more to be tolerant of the smokers among them - friends and loved ones, all.
"We can protect Angelenos from the real dangers of secondhand smoke - and enact policies to dissuade smoking - without getting into the business of making life needlessly difficult for people just because they are saddled with an unpopular addiction.
"When the War on Smoking turns into the War on Smokers, it's time to call it quits."
Posted by Rich Perelman on August 12, 2008 at 09:46 PM in Commentaries | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Here are the actual source documents that propose making smoking a criminal offense, introduced by Los Angeles City Councilman Bernard Parks and seconded by Councilwoman Jan Perry on August 8, 2008:
>> Motion for the City to direct the City Attorney to draw up an ordinance banning smoking in public places.
>> Resolution by the City to ask the County of Los Angeles to implement laws banning smoking in public places.
>> City Council Parks' astonishing editorial on why public smoking should be banned, from the CityWatchLA.com Web site.
Comments on these items are contained in subsequent posts.
Posted by Rich Perelman on August 12, 2008 at 09:43 PM in Official Documents | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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Op-Ed submitted to the Los Angeles Downtown News
The following editorial was submitted to the Los Angeles Downtown News on August 19; there is no guarantee of publication, of course, but it notes the practical impact of the August 8 Motion introduced by Councilman Parks.
"THIS IS THE POLICE; WE’D LIKE TO SPEAK WITH YOU"
Imagine a knock on your door on a weekday evening, or a weekend afternoon. A Los Angeles Police officer wants to speak with you, to find out if you were smoking a cigarette or a cigar or a pipe in the hallway of your apartment building.
Or on a street corner. Or in a parking lot. Or in back of your office building, in the open air.
If City Councilman Bernard Parks has his way, the officer will cite you, or perhaps arrest you for using a legal product: tobacco. On August 8, Parks introduced a motion asking the City Attorney to draft an ordinance to ban smoking essentially everywhere in the City of Los Angeles, and a Resolution asking the County to do the same.
My research shows that there about 384,000 adult smokers resident in the City and about 998,000 in the County. Compared to the City’s police force of 9,600, that’s at least a 40-1 ratio of smokers to officers in the City and the ratio gets even larger in the County. Parks has stated in an online editorial that his no-smoking ordinance should not impose any significant burden on the police. Huh? Is that because he expects the police to just ignore smokers, or will enforcement be on a "sometimes" basis?
What’s worse, criminalizing smoking will have the horrifying effect of creating an entirely new reason why police can stop and question someone. Even if you’re not a smoker, are the police simply allowed to ignore a call from a trouble-making neighbor who accuses you – living in the apartment across the hall – of smoking in the hallway . . . even if you don’t smoke?
This is a dangerous aspect of Parks’s proposal, not to mention the drain on not just the police, but also the City Attorney’s Office, who must prosecute these cases. Will tourists also be cited or arrested? What about the homeless who smoke?
Parks says he wants to eliminate outdoor smoking because of the threat from secondhand smoke. In fact, there is no health threat from passing exposure to secondhand smoke and the 2006 Surgeon General’s report on the subject never even mentions such a threat.
Dr. Michael Siegel, a professor in the Boston University School of Public Health and a long-time supporter of indoor smoking bans, is dead-set against outdoor bans and he explains why in a recent blog entry about a similar ban in tobaccoanalysis.blogspot.com:
"There is clearly no need to ban smoking in every outdoor location in a city in order to protect nonsmokers from the hazards of tobacco smoke exposure. Banning smoking on every street and in every sidewalk, alley and parking lot is simply not justified by any science which demonstrates that exposure to secondhand smoke in these locations represents a significant public health problem."
He also notes that the same justifications used "to ban smoking in virtually all outdoors locations could also be used to ban the consumption of fatty foods in public, or even to ban obese people from public places."
Councilman Parks, in a tight race for a Supervisor post against former City Councilman and current State Senator Mark Ridley-Thomas, has gone too far. Please withdraw your motion; I am a smoker, but I am not a criminal.
(Mr. Perelman, a life-long resident of Los Angeles, works in the Wilshire Center area and is the editor-in-chief of CigarCyclopedia.com. A Web site on this issue has been created entitled WeAreNotCriminals.com.)
Posted by Rich Perelman on August 19, 2008 at 11:57 PM in Commentaries | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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