Legions, First Nations exempt from new anti-smoking rules - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 16, 2024, 09:17 AM | Calgary | -6.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Sudbury

Legions, First Nations exempt from new anti-smoking rules

The list of spots where smokers can spark up is getting shorter, but there are still some exceptions.
Tenants who lived in apartments before a rule banning smoking in apartments took effect can still smoke indoors. (CBC)

The list of spots where smokers can spark up is getting shorter.

As of Jan. 1, all outdoor sports fields, playgrounds, skating rinks, beaches and restaurant patios are off limits.

But if you'reon a Legion patio, smoking isallowed.

Legions were exempt under previousmunicipal bylaws, andthatexemption has been carried over into Ontario's new law saidMichaelPerley,director of the Ontario campaign for Action on Tobacco.

"What isn't really clear is why a policy like the one that has just come in a week ago that's extended to patios should continue this exemption," he said.

"The original exemption for legions doesn't make much sense from any health point of view."

Perley joined JasonTurnbullon CBC Radio's Up North to discuss theexceptions to the new smoking rules:

We speak with an anti-smoking advocate about the exceptions to the new smoking rules that came into effect Jan. 1.

On mobile? Click here

None of the Smoke Free Ontario Act,including smoking inside a restaurant or even an office, applies on First Nations reserves either although some reserves have passed their own bylaws against smoking.

A senior policy analyst for the Grand Chief of the Anishnabek Nation, which includes 39 First Nations in Ontario,said a wholesale strategy for regulation is not a good fit for First Nations communities.
Many organizations including Health Sciences North in Sudbury have brought in their own policies on smoking. (Kate Rutherford/CBC)

"The idea of regulating people with a blanket approach is a completely foreign concept," JodyKechego said. So that's a Canadian government and Ontario government perspective," he said.

However, regardless of cultural considerations, Perley said he hopes more First Nations will ban smoking in areas likerestaurants and patios, because of the health consequences.

"It's taken some time to get us to the point where we now have a province-wide regulation. It's very unfortunate that First Nations don't see the need to do that, because we do know that this is a very dangerous substance," Perley said.