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I am from NY and I currently go to college in Ohio

I am used to no smoking in bars, clubs, resturants. No smoking anywhere, they even rope off what sections you can smoke when your OUTSIDE, at theme parks. In my mind it's the greatest law ever because smoking in a smoking section in a resturant is like peeing in a pool.

What law ended up getting passed in the state of Ohio?

Can people still smoke in resturant and bars?
Whats the deal

cause this will effect my next 4 years of living here?

2006-11-07 17:47:59 · 5 answers · asked by Coxie Megan 4 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

k your answer didn't help at all

I am still clueless

2006-11-07 17:58:14 · update #1

thanks for tying

2006-11-07 17:59:51 · update #2

I'm still confused

can people still smoke in bars and resturants?

2006-11-07 18:00:24 · update #3

5 answers

No smoking in bars or restaurants, and other places too. I voted for Issue 5 and helped it pass. I agree it is an excellent law. Takes effect 30 days from passage.

Full text of the law here with all the details you are looking for:

http://www.smartvoter.org/2006/11/07/oh/state/issue/5/

~Kyle

2006-11-08 05:41:45 · answer #1 · answered by Kyleontheweb 5 · 0 1

Issue 5 was passed, and issue 4 was not, meaning the more stringent ban on smoking in most public buildings passed, and the more lenient amendment which would exempt bars and others from the ban was not.

So, no smoking in bars, clubs, restaurants in Ohio anymore.

Edit:
Just informational...
On face value, the state constitutional amendment seemed like overkill. Actually, it was a piece of legislation which was being sponsored by the smoking lobby as an attempt to undercut current Ohio law that prohibited smoking. Note the section in the proposed amendment which said that no smoking-related laws could be passed without constitutional amendment should Issue 4 be passed. That would have meant that more stringent laws on the books would be invalidated, and the constitutional amendment which was rather lax, allowing smoking in bars amongst other places, would take precedence, and future efforts to outlaw smoking in public places would be that much harder. Luckily, it did not pass.

2006-11-07 18:04:44 · answer #2 · answered by TravelO 2 · 1 0

It's apparently on the ballot today as a (1) an initiative against smoking in public places and (2) a constitutional amendment that would ban such laws. Overkill I should think: inappropriate for a state constitution. But I don't live in Ohio.

Issue 4: constitutional amendment that overturns smoke-free laws already in place in Columbus and 20 other Ohio cities and prevents anyone from ever passing a smoke-free law without an amendment to the constitution.

Issue 5: "right to breathe smoke-free air in all restaurants, public places and workplaces."

Similar laws are now in place in Ireland and I think now in Italy and France too. There's one scheduled to go into effect in Britain next year. The Irish pub owners complained when the law was discussed, but apparently their business has improved since it went into effect.

2006-11-07 17:55:41 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

We do have a law like this where I live. I don't smoke, but I still voted against it because I think it's every business owner's right to decide whether to allow smoking. If you don't want to be around smoke while you eat, go to a non-smoking restaurant; if you don't want to work around smoke, don't apply for a job at a smoking restaurant. In fact, before the law passed, the whole county had a system of color-coded signs so you could see each place's smoking policy before you went inside, in case you were allergic to smoke. According to the county's statistics, green signs (no smoking) outnumbered yellow and red signs (smoking allowed somewhere/everywhere) by over a 2-to-1 margin, so I thought the law was unnecessary. But it just so happens that all the bars and restaurants I visit used to be smoking places, because some of my friends smoke. It's really nice that I can go to the bar now and not come home reeking of smoke. On the other hand, it also means I don't go out as much, especially in the winter, because my friends would often rather stay home than go someplace where they can't smoke inside.

2016-03-19 05:14:44 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Simple answer to a simple question. No.

2006-11-08 01:53:44 · answer #5 · answered by Zelda 6 · 1 1

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