New Yorkers Have Mixed Feelings About Ban on Smoking in Parks.
Smoking has long been illegal in New York City bars and restaurants, including open-air restaurants, as well as in public transit, workplaces, schools and stores, among other places. On May 23rd, New York also joined 500 other U.S. municipalities that have banned smoking in parks and public squares. Under the new law, smokers who light up anywhere in New York’s more than 1,700 parks and pedestrian plazas, or along its 22 kilometers of beaches, could face a $50 fine.
Park visitors questioned on one of the last days before the ban took  effect had mixed feelings about the new law. Micah Bozeman, who was  sitting with his friend Megan Burns, a smoker, said he thought the ban  was a good idea, on balance. “I don’t want cigarette smoke in my face  when I’m sitting in a park. I don’t want it in my face while walking  down the street, either,” he said. Nor did he want to lie in the beach  and find cigarette butts in the sand. On the other hand, Bozeman noted,  “People have an addiction. They need to smoke.”
Exhaling a cloud  of smoke, his friend Burns exclaimed, “We’re outdoors! I don’t see how  it could really bother anyone that much.” She added that she doesn’t  smoke much, but prefers doing it outdoors, where she’s not so exposed to  her own secondhand smoke. “I don’t like being trapped in an apartment  with smoke.”
Nowhere to go for a smoke?
“It’s  stupid,” said Jean Pierre, another smoker. “I think it’s crazy, because  they’re making it so that you can’t go nowhere and have a cigarette.”  He said that he is considerate and doesn’t light up without asking  people nearby if they mind. “I do show respect for people who don’t  smoke. I will get up and move if my smoke is bothering you,” he said.
“A lot of people are considerate,” conceded Sharon Stahlnecker, a  tourist from Oregon. “But it’s just that those of us who don’t smoke,  appreciate no smoke.” Michael Walters, who was sitting down for a  lunch-hour game of chess in City Hall Park, agreed. “I think the ban is  good. It will improve the health of the public, the smoker and the  nonsmoker alike,” he said.
That is also the hope of the Bay  Terrace Community Alliance in Queens, whose members say they were the  first to lobby for the smoking ban. On the cool gray day that the new  law took effect, they gathered in a riverside park to celebrate.  Activist Warren Schreiber said that discarded cigarette butts were a  litter nuisance and a hazard to wild birds. And he said that children  should not see people smoking in the parks, even if it can’t be avoided  elsewhere.
Some anti-smoking activists fear the ban could trigger a public backlash
Yet  other anti-smoking advocates say that people’s health is not endangered  by momentary exposure to smoke diluted in the open air. They argue that  the ban could lead to a backlash against more important anti-tobacco  campaigns. Michael Siegel, a professor at Boston University’s School of  Public Health, said the emphasis should be on the 22 American states  that still allow smoking in bars, restaurants and casinos.
“My fear is that we’re going to detract from smoke-free policies  where they’re really a life-and-death matter for employees,” he said.  “There are still about one-third of workers in the country who are not  protected from secondhand smoke in the workplace. The levels of exposure  in these environments are enormous, and people are exposed chronically.  And they can’t escape, unlike a park, where you can just get up and  move.”
Siegel also contends that banning smoking in the open  space of the city’s parks will only lead to more concentrated secondhand  smoke on New York sidewalks, at park entrances and in people’s homes.  “We know that chronic exposure to secondhand smoke in the home is a very  important source of exposure and disease for people, especially for  children,” he said. “So if anything, the message we want to be sending  to smokers is ‘please, do smoke outdoors! That’s where you really should  be smoking to avoid [these] effects.’"
However, Rebecca Kalin,  head of a group called Asthma Free School Zone, noted that even passing  exposure to smoke can cause severe reactions in some people with asthma.  “It’s not always easy to move away from a smoker,” Kalin said. “And it  would be impossible to say, well, it’s okay here, and it’s not okay  there. The goal really, is to eradicate smoking, eradicate tobacco. It  is dangerous. It is life-threatening. It takes more lives than many  other diseases put together.”
City officials say they hope the  law will be self-enforcing, and that park officers, not police, will  issue warnings and tickets. But critics predict the ban will be widely  ignored in New York’s thousands of hectares of parkland. And one  smokers’ rights group, the New York chapter of Citizens Lobbying Against  Smoker Harassment, said it will flout the rule with a  "smoke-in-the-park" protest at a beach in Brooklyn. In a statement, the  group said, “This law will be paid the respect it deserves.”
 
