Pima
Community College may implement a policy to restrict smoking, e-cigarette and
tobacco products to designated areas on campus.
PCC
administration submitted the proposal to the PCC Governing Board Wednesday
night.
Board
Policy 2304 limits smoking, e-cigarette and tobacco product use to designated
outside areas on PCC property, in order to compliance with the Smoke-Free
Arizona Act and related Pima County code provisions and city of Tucson
ordinances, officials said.
The
administration suggested that the proposed policy replace the current
smoking policy, which prohibits
smoking in all buildings owned or leased by PCC. Smoking is also not permitted
within 25 feet of entrances and exits, fresh-air grills and in other seating
areas, such as baseball fields.
According
to a campus-wide survey of about 4,700 people, 81 percent
indicated they do not smoke; 78 percent supported either the creation of
designated smoking areas or prohibiting the use of tobacco products on college
property; 70
percent agreed that smokeless tobacco should be banned from inside all
buildings; and 21.8
percent supported the current policy.
If the
board approves the proposed policy, faculty and staff will help determine
designated smoking areas.
The policy
will be submitted to the board with a final reading projected for early 2014.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013
David Preece: Jack Wilshere smoking outrage clouded the real issues
I’m not a big fan of international fortnight.
With no football to keep you going except for the Northern section of the Johnstone’s Paint Trophy and a repetitively boring loop of an interview on Sky Sports News with a young lad still apologising for smoking a cigarette over a week after the incident.
Then having to make do with an England performance so tepid it should be prescribed to lower blood pressure, there are plenty of reasons to dislike international football.
I’m actually half-hoping we don’t qualify, if only to push forward the revolution needed to overhaul our national game. Also I’d enjoy having a bit of a moan.
For the record, can I say what a load of old nonsense that was about Jack Wilshere smoking a cigarette?
Imagine that, someone doing something perfectly legal in the privacy of their life outside of football. It’s a strange perspective we British have on smoking and drinking.
We’re up in arms about someone smoking but has anybody questioned the wisdom of his presence in a nightclub during the week where a few drinks would have a more detrimental effect on his performance than a cigarette?
I’m not a smoker despite both my parents and all four of my grandparents being constantly shrouded in a nicotine-laden fog when I was a kid.
But it did make me wonder how many of the people making a fuss of Wilshere’s “reckless abandon” actually drink and smoke in front of their kids on a regular basis? Some people forget they are their kids first role models, not Wilshere, or Harry Styles for that matter.
I’ve digressed but the fact it’s still being mentioned on TV is down to the news blackhole that’s international week.
As a player it was always something you looked forward to. If you were involved in your national team, great.
If you weren’t, the manager might give you anything up to five days off to recharge your batteries and spend some time with your family.
Not that I ever had to worry about any call-ups after I’d passed youth level. I was always jealous of team-mates jetting off to join international squads.
When you’re playing for a club with a few internationals you feel like you’ve been left at home to babysit while all your friends have gone to a party.
You wait for them to return to hear their stories about who got off with who and who was drunk by nine o’clock and threw up everywhere.
Putting on my coach’s hat for a minute, I can see how much of a pain it is for Derek McInnes but it really is a double-edged sword. If your charges are scattered around the world, it means you have good players. On the other hand, if you have a full squad at home for a whole fortnight, it gives you the chance to get down to some hard graft.
Perhaps that’s the secret of making sure your team actually benefits from the boredom of international fortnight.
Assemble yourself a squad of quality players but just make sure they’re not quite good enough to be picked or that they have already retired from international football.
With no football to keep you going except for the Northern section of the Johnstone’s Paint Trophy and a repetitively boring loop of an interview on Sky Sports News with a young lad still apologising for smoking a cigarette over a week after the incident.
Then having to make do with an England performance so tepid it should be prescribed to lower blood pressure, there are plenty of reasons to dislike international football.
I’m actually half-hoping we don’t qualify, if only to push forward the revolution needed to overhaul our national game. Also I’d enjoy having a bit of a moan.
For the record, can I say what a load of old nonsense that was about Jack Wilshere smoking a cigarette?
Imagine that, someone doing something perfectly legal in the privacy of their life outside of football. It’s a strange perspective we British have on smoking and drinking.
We’re up in arms about someone smoking but has anybody questioned the wisdom of his presence in a nightclub during the week where a few drinks would have a more detrimental effect on his performance than a cigarette?
I’m not a smoker despite both my parents and all four of my grandparents being constantly shrouded in a nicotine-laden fog when I was a kid.
But it did make me wonder how many of the people making a fuss of Wilshere’s “reckless abandon” actually drink and smoke in front of their kids on a regular basis? Some people forget they are their kids first role models, not Wilshere, or Harry Styles for that matter.
I’ve digressed but the fact it’s still being mentioned on TV is down to the news blackhole that’s international week.
As a player it was always something you looked forward to. If you were involved in your national team, great.
If you weren’t, the manager might give you anything up to five days off to recharge your batteries and spend some time with your family.
Not that I ever had to worry about any call-ups after I’d passed youth level. I was always jealous of team-mates jetting off to join international squads.
When you’re playing for a club with a few internationals you feel like you’ve been left at home to babysit while all your friends have gone to a party.
You wait for them to return to hear their stories about who got off with who and who was drunk by nine o’clock and threw up everywhere.
Putting on my coach’s hat for a minute, I can see how much of a pain it is for Derek McInnes but it really is a double-edged sword. If your charges are scattered around the world, it means you have good players. On the other hand, if you have a full squad at home for a whole fortnight, it gives you the chance to get down to some hard graft.
Perhaps that’s the secret of making sure your team actually benefits from the boredom of international fortnight.
Assemble yourself a squad of quality players but just make sure they’re not quite good enough to be picked or that they have already retired from international football.
Smoking rules
It's surprising and disappointing that Gov. Mary Fallin has
delayed action on an initiative petition to tighten state smoking
regulations.
In February, a Senate committee effectively killed a Fallin-backed bill until 2015 that would have allowed local governments to pass smoking ordinances that are stricter than state law.
In February, a Senate committee effectively killed a Fallin-backed bill until 2015 that would have allowed local governments to pass smoking ordinances that are stricter than state law.
The governor jumped out
front, held a press conference with a big crowd of health officials and
said she would lead a campaign to take the issue to the people.
The vast majority of Okla- homans want local government control on smoking regulation, Fallin said. She was right.
While the governor didn't say the initiative she would push would be for local control, everyone assumed that would be the idea.
Since then, not much has
happened. Fallin now says that such a proposal would stand a better
chance after the 2014 general election.
We're not sure we see the political logic of that choice.
We are sure that delays will mean some nonsmok- ers will continue to work in second-hand smoke environments longer.
Second-hand smoke is deadly, and only a handful of states don't allow local governments to restrict it.
Anytime smoking
regulation is the topic, suspicions quickly arise about the influence of
Big Tobacco money, but we don't doubt Fallin's personal commitment on
this issue —both of her parents were smokers and the habit affected
their decline and death.
Putting off the
initiative campaign could give the Legislature another shot at the
issue. Our hope is that this important issue can be dealt with as soon
as possible. The health of Oklahoma citizens is at stake.
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Why Do Young Adults Start Smoking? Researchers Identify 3 Risk Factors
Considering all we know about cigarettes and their scary health
effects, why would anyone start smoking them? While it's impossible to
pinpoint a single reason for why any one person begins, a new study
identifies three risk factors for taking up the habit.
The study, conducted by researchers at the University of Montreal School of Public Health, suggests that for people between the ages of 18 and 24, the three biggest risk factors for starting smoking are being impulsive, using alcohol regularly, and getting poor grades in school.
The research, published in the Journal of Adolescent Health, is based on data from 1,293 teens from the greater Montreal area who were part of the Nicotine Dependence in Teens study that started in 1999. The teens were followed up in 22 "cycles," from when they were at an average age of 12.7 to when they were at an average age of 24.
By cycle 22, 75 percent of the teens had tried smoking. Forty-four percent of the teens started smoking before entering high school, 43 percent started during high school, and 14 percent started sometime in the six years post-high school.
Not all those who tried cigarettes continued to smoke, but researchers found that impulsivity, poor grades and regular alcohol use were the three risk factors associated with those who began smoking after high school -- or when they were between ages 18 and 24.
Study researcher Jennifer O'Loughlin, a professor at the university, speculated in a statement that one potential reason impulsivity may play a role in smoking in young adulthood is because "parents of impulsive children exercise tighter control when they are living with them at home to protect their children from adopting behaviors that can lead to smoking, and this protection may diminish over time."
Alcohol consumption could also be linked with starting smoking because alcohol "reduces inhibitions and self-control," she added in the statement.
The study, conducted by researchers at the University of Montreal School of Public Health, suggests that for people between the ages of 18 and 24, the three biggest risk factors for starting smoking are being impulsive, using alcohol regularly, and getting poor grades in school.
The research, published in the Journal of Adolescent Health, is based on data from 1,293 teens from the greater Montreal area who were part of the Nicotine Dependence in Teens study that started in 1999. The teens were followed up in 22 "cycles," from when they were at an average age of 12.7 to when they were at an average age of 24.
By cycle 22, 75 percent of the teens had tried smoking. Forty-four percent of the teens started smoking before entering high school, 43 percent started during high school, and 14 percent started sometime in the six years post-high school.
Not all those who tried cigarettes continued to smoke, but researchers found that impulsivity, poor grades and regular alcohol use were the three risk factors associated with those who began smoking after high school -- or when they were between ages 18 and 24.
Study researcher Jennifer O'Loughlin, a professor at the university, speculated in a statement that one potential reason impulsivity may play a role in smoking in young adulthood is because "parents of impulsive children exercise tighter control when they are living with them at home to protect their children from adopting behaviors that can lead to smoking, and this protection may diminish over time."
Alcohol consumption could also be linked with starting smoking because alcohol "reduces inhibitions and self-control," she added in the statement.
Monday, September 23, 2013
Age Limits on Tobacco Products: Debating Issue
Recently there has been taken a decision by New York City Council to
raise the minimum age for tobacco buying. Thus it presupposes that to
purchase any tobacco product you must be at least 21 and not 18 as it
was before.
Christine C. Quinn, the City Council speaker, explained the stated decision by the personal notice that most teen-agers start smoking before age 21 as it is not forbidden. If the discussed decision comes into force teen-agers simply will not have any other alternative than to wait till 21, and there is a possibility that many of them will give up the idea.
In fact the situation is not so simple as it may seem at the first sight. The raise of minimum age to purchase cigarettes can not stop those who intend to smoke. And Britain is an example of a similar situation when the minimum age to purchase cigarettes was raised from 16 to 18. Though some positive changes were noticed the new legislation could not control the volume of smoked cigarettes.
Moreover the raise of minimum age does not exclude any other sources to get cigarettes. It is not obligatory for those under 21 to buy cigarettes themselves, they can just ask someone who has already a right to buy them. Thus the situation is quite double. From the one hand the raise of minimum age should exclude the possibility to buy cigarettes by teen-agers, but from the other hand it is difficult to predict any other possibilities to get cigarettes.
Christine C. Quinn, the City Council speaker, explained the stated decision by the personal notice that most teen-agers start smoking before age 21 as it is not forbidden. If the discussed decision comes into force teen-agers simply will not have any other alternative than to wait till 21, and there is a possibility that many of them will give up the idea.
In fact the situation is not so simple as it may seem at the first sight. The raise of minimum age to purchase cigarettes can not stop those who intend to smoke. And Britain is an example of a similar situation when the minimum age to purchase cigarettes was raised from 16 to 18. Though some positive changes were noticed the new legislation could not control the volume of smoked cigarettes.
Moreover the raise of minimum age does not exclude any other sources to get cigarettes. It is not obligatory for those under 21 to buy cigarettes themselves, they can just ask someone who has already a right to buy them. Thus the situation is quite double. From the one hand the raise of minimum age should exclude the possibility to buy cigarettes by teen-agers, but from the other hand it is difficult to predict any other possibilities to get cigarettes.
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