Long Beach, CA
File #: 18-0724    Version: 1 Name: CD3-Prohibition of Restaurant Patio Smoking
Type: Agenda Item Status: Approved
File created: 8/13/2018 In control: City Council
On agenda: 8/21/2018 Final action: 8/21/2018
Title: Recommendation to request City Attorney to draft an ordinance banning smoking on outdoor seating areas of publically and privately owned eating establishments, and within a given distance from outdoor eating establishment seating.
Sponsors: COUNCILWOMAN SUZIE A. PRICE, THIRD DISTRICT, COUNCILWOMAN LENA GONZALEZ, FIRST DISTRICT, COUNCILMEMBER REX RICHARDSON, NINTH DISTRICT
Indexes: Ordinance request
Attachments: 1. 082118-R-19sr.pdf
Related files: 18-1104
TITLE
Recommendation to request City Attorney to draft an ordinance banning smoking on outdoor seating areas of publically and privately owned eating establishments, and within a given distance from outdoor eating establishment seating.

DISCUSSION
Current Long Beach municipal code 8.68.090 B states that any eating establishment “…which maintain an outdoor seating area shall maintain a contiguous no smoking area of not less than two-thirds (2/3) of both the outdoor seating capacity or the outdoor floor space in which customers are being served.”1 This policy stands in stark contrast to the increasing necessity and public desire for greater health protections from the harmful effects of second-hand smoke.

Since the 1964 Surgeon General’s Report, 2.5 million adults who were nonsmokers died because they breathed secondhand smoke. Secondhand smoke causes numerous health problems in infants and children, including more frequent and severe asthma attacks, respiratory infections, ear infections, and sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) as well as countless further reasons that include cancer, coronary heart disease, and stroke.

Today we all know the harms that people suffer from exposure to smoke which goes well beyond the individual choosing to smoke but to those nearby in public, children and elderly who are more susceptible to the harms of second-hand smoke, as well as employees in restaurants who have no choice but to be exposed to smoke in the course of their day to day job. The proof of health consequences is overwhelming and undeniable, and as such the City of Long Beach should not require smoking in publically or privately owned eating establishments to be allowed, or within close proximity to those outdoor seating areas or open windows and doors of enclosed eating establishments.

Long Beach has been a leader in healthy living by establishing bike lanes, authorizing community gardening programs, and urban farming, we have required healthier options for dr...

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