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Montreal

Quebec government should ban smoking on terrasses, Marvin Rotrand says

Montreal city councillor Marvin Rotrand wants the Quebec government to take steps to reduce tobacco use in the province by 10 per cent over the next decade, starting with a province-wide ban on smoking on patios.

Research has found harmful levels of second-hand smoke on Montreal's patios

Montreal city councillor Marvin Rotrand wants Quebec to ban smoking on restaurant and bar patios. (CBC)

With warmer weather finally on the horizon, Quebecers will soon be soaking up the sun outside bars and restaurants.

ButMontreal city councillor Marvin Rotrand wants the Quebec government to put a stop to smoking cigarettes on terraces.

Rotrand introduced a motion that passed Monday nightcalling on the province to reduce tobacco use by 10 per cent over the next decade.

Banning smoking on patios, as has been done in provinces including Ontario and Alberta,is a good place to start, he said.

Last week the city of Montreal passed passed a motion calling on the provincial government to act quickly and decisively to reduce tobacco use in Quebec. Snowdon city councillor Marvin Rotrand proposed the motion and he wants the province to start by bann

"The bulk of the population are not smokers and many people just don't like having to breathe in somebody else's smoke when they want to enjoy a nice warm summer day on a restaurant patio," Rotrand told Daybreak.

One restaurant banned smoking on its terrace by choice.

Lawrence Auger, the manager ofL'Acadmieon Crescent Street, said the change came at the request of customers.

"It was a great result," Auger said."People don't want cigarettes when they are enjoying their meal."

The head of Montreal's bar owners association, Peter Sergakis, is opposed to the idea.

He said eating and drinking establishments should have a right to choose whether or not people can smoke on their terraces.

"I don't think it should be government telling them, 'no smoking,'" Sergakis said.

Sergakis said his business has suffered since smoking was banned inside bars. He fears a ban on patio smoking would hurt even more.

Recently, researchers at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland found harmful levels of second-hand smoke in a survey of Montreal bar patios.

The study found that a single lit cigarette could create air quality levels comparable to a smoggy day in Los Angeles.