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Editorial
College should have allowed smoking in cars

Although the tobacco-free policy at MHCC is in effect, several students can still be seen smoking all around campus. Now, instead of smoking at designated areas with receptacles, they appear to simply be smoking in areas that aren’t visible to most faculty and other talking heads. Taking a walk around the pond area and other parts of the back-40, cigarette butts can be found anywhere, most of which appear fresh. So rather than having a place to throw away their trash, students are simply flinging them into the surrounding environment.

According to public safety, things are “going pretty smoothly” so far. Perhaps this is because public safety can’t be in more than two or three places at once, and students know how to sneak a puff here and there. There is also the possibility that students just aren’t aware of the new policy.

Thursday morning, a group of smokers – about 60 feet from a parked public safety vehicle – told a reporter they “don’t care if they get caught.” When asked if they would pay a possible fine, the students said they wouldn’t. The group was also unaware that students were not allowed to smoke in their own vehicle, to which they responded, “That’s bullshit.”
Did college officials really think that students would no longer smoke in their vehicles?

f students were able to smoke in their cars, rather than having to go off campus entirely, they may at least be more inclined to follow the policy instead of blatantly ignoring it and riddling the campus with litter.
If students are in the parking lot, they’re likely already inhaling all sorts of exhaust from a myriad of vehicles; cigarette smoke would, at the very least, be no worse from a health stand point.


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Comments

Founder
Almost ten years ago, when smoking bans were gathering steam and infiltrating every inch of space on the planet, I warned, "When we can't smoke anywhere, we'll smoke everywhere."

This editorial illustrates the unfolding of that prediction perfectly. Expect to see more of it.

Founder, NYC Citizens Lobbying Against Smoker Harassment (C.L.A.S.H.)
#1 - Audrey Silk - 01/08/2010 - 10:38
Didn't follow the old rules either...
Last term it didn't take more than a few moments of walking around campus to find people smoking in areas they weren't supposed to. They'd drop their butts wherever they wanted, and I had to regularly work my way through crowds of smokers on sidewalks who couldn't be bothered to move out of the way and let people through. And no, those sidewalks were not approved smoking areas.

So no, I don't think students would be more inclined to follow the rules if given more options. They didn't before, so why do you think they would now?

The fact is that those students need to learn to be adults. That means following the rules whether you like it or not. Very few work places allow any smoking on their premises either, so this rule isn't just limited to college or government property. Disobeying the rules there will get you more than a fine - it'll get you fired.
#2 - Jenni Simonis - 01/14/2010 - 03:51
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