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USA Today: Smoking Bans Spread to Prisons [07/23-6] By Gregg Zoroya USA TODAY [07/21/04] The last sanctuary for smokers in government buildings has always been the worst place to be prison. But those institutions are fast becoming smoke-free, to the anguish of nicotine-addicted prisoners and guards. Last week, the Federal Bureau of Prisons became the latest to join the no-smoking movement by instituting a near-total ban on lighted tobacco in 105 prisons holding 180,000 inmates. At least 38 of 50 state correctional departments report that they are either smoke-free or have partial smoking bans, according to a 2002 survey conducted by the American Correctional Association, a professional trade organization. And more states keep joining the list. Some states, such as Delaware, allow other tobacco products, like snuff or chew. Others, such as Florida, allow inmates to smoke in designated areas outside. Over the past 10 years, prisons and jails have moved toward banning tobacco products out of concerns about the health hazard of secondhand smoke. In addition, a string of court opinions, including a 1993 Supreme Court ruling, have supported inmate claims that being held in a smoke-filled prison may constitute cruel and unusual punishment. States have moved at different speeds and with varying success to restrict or ban tobacco. Concerns that inmates would turn violent if they couldn't smoke have so far been unfounded. Inmates are like a lot of people," DeLano says, "if you tell them in advance what's going to happen, they grumble and complain a little bit. And then they kind of get on with it and manage the change." In some prisons where smoking has been banned, tobacco has become the black-market favorite, quickly outpacing narcotics in sales. "It's ultimately going to be the national norm," says Horn, who instituted limited smoking restrictions in 1995 when he ran Pennsylvania's prisons. "It's the smart thing to do. It's the right thing to do." Even so, the growing tobacco black market has raised some concerns. In Colorado, where the state's nearly 20,000 prisoners were barred from smoking in 1999 prison employees were barred a year later the price of a smuggled cigarette is now $10, says Alison Morgan, spokeswoman for the Colorado Department of Corrections. Reginald Wilkinson, director of the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, which has 32 prisons and nearly 44,000 prisoners, says black-market tobacco doesn't replace the demand for marijuana and other drugs; it only adds to the list of contraband. Ohio has moved slowly on banning tobacco. Some institutions provide alternative housing for non-smoking inmates. New prisons must be smoke-free. But the vast majority of state inmates still live in prisons where smoking is allowed. In 1994, Texas became one of the first states to ban smoking. Last year, the state cracked down on smuggling by making it a felony to provide tobacco to inmates. State Rep. Terri Hodge of Dallas, a smoker who proposed the new law, says it was necessary to stop the growing black market. The Federal Bureau of Prisons, in making its facilities smoke-free last week, tried to ease the change by offering smoking-cessation programs to prisoners and inmates, along with a supply of nicotine patches. Inmates must pay for their patches. The guards may get them for free. The federal correctional employees union fought the smoking ban by arguing that prison guards working long shifts in locked-down facilities would not have the luxury of stepping outside for a smoke. The union took its demands for indoor smoking areas to a binding arbitration panel in 2001 and lost.
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"=> Vox Populi " <vox@popu.li> wrote in message news:4vdNc.38$vV6.18186@news.uswest.net...
USA Today: Smoking Bans Spread to Prisons [07/23-6] By Gregg Zoroya USA TODAY [07/21/04] The last sanctuary for smokers in government buildings has always been the worst place to be prison. But those institutions are fast becoming smoke-free, to the anguish of nicotine-addicted prisoners and guards. Last week, the Federal Bureau of Prisons became the latest to join the no-smoking movement by instituting a near-total ban on lighted tobacco in 105 prisons holding 180,000 inmates. At least 38 of 50 state correctional departments report that they are either smoke-free or have partial smoking bans, according to a 2002 survey conducted by the American Correctional Association, a professional trade organization. And more states keep joining the list. Some states, such as Delaware, allow other tobacco products, like snuff or chew. Others, such as Florida, allow inmates to smoke in designated areas outside. Over the past 10 years, prisons and jails have moved toward banning tobacco products out of concerns about the health hazard of secondhand smoke. In addition, a string of court opinions, including a 1993 Supreme Court ruling, have supported inmate claims that being held in a smoke-filled prison may constitute cruel and unusual punishment. States have moved at different speeds and with varying success to restrict or ban tobacco. Concerns that inmates would turn violent if they couldn't smoke have so far been unfounded. Inmates are like a lot of people," DeLano says, "if you tell them in advance what's going to happen, they grumble and complain a little bit. And then they kind of get on with it and manage the change." In some prisons where smoking has been banned, tobacco has become the black-market favorite, quickly outpacing narcotics in sales. "It's ultimately going to be the national norm," says Horn, who instituted limited smoking restrictions in 1995 when he ran Pennsylvania's prisons. "It's the smart thing to do. It's the right thing to do." Even so, the growing tobacco black market has raised some concerns. In Colorado, where the state's nearly 20,000 prisoners were barred from smoking in 1999 prison employees were barred a year later the price of a smuggled cigarette is now $10, says Alison Morgan, spokeswoman for the Colorado Department of Corrections. Reginald Wilkinson, director of the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, which has 32 prisons and nearly 44,000 prisoners, says black-market tobacco doesn't replace the demand for marijuana and other drugs; it only adds to the list of contraband. Ohio has moved slowly on banning tobacco. Some institutions provide alternative housing for non-smoking inmates. New prisons must be smoke-free. But the vast majority of state inmates still live in prisons where smoking is allowed. In 1994, Texas became one of the first states to ban smoking. Last year, the state cracked down on smuggling by making it a felony to provide tobacco to inmates. State Rep. Terri Hodge of Dallas, a smoker who proposed the new law, says it was necessary to stop the growing black market. The Federal Bureau of Prisons, in making its facilities smoke-free last week, tried to ease the change by offering smoking-cessation programs to prisoners and inmates, along with a supply of nicotine patches. Inmates must pay for their patches. The guards may get them for free. The federal correctional employees union fought the smoking ban by arguing that prison guards working long shifts in locked-down facilities would not have the luxury of stepping outside for a smoke. The union took its demands for indoor smoking areas to a binding arbitration panel in 2001 and lost.
Well, that does it. I ain't goin' to jail no more. Screw 'em!
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"=> Vox Populi " <vox@popu.li> wrote in message
news:4vdNc.38$vV6.18186@news.uswest.net... USA Today: Smoking Bans Spread to Prisons [07/23-6] By Gregg Zoroya USA TODAY [07/21/04] The last sanctuary for smokers in government buildings has always been the worst place to be prison. But those institutions are fast becoming smoke-free, to the anguish of nicotine-addicted prisoners and guards. Last week, the Federal Bureau of Prisons became the latest to join the no-smoking movement by instituting a near-total ban on lighted tobacco in 105 prisons holding 180,000 inmates. At least 38 of 50 state correctional departments report that they are either smoke-free or have partial smoking bans, according to a 2002 survey conducted by the American Correctional Association, a professional trade organization. And more states keep joining the list. Some states, such as Delaware, allow other tobacco products, like snuff or chew. Others, such as Florida, allow inmates to smoke in designated areas outside. Over the past 10 years, prisons and jails have moved toward banning tobacco products out of concerns about the health hazard of secondhand smoke. In addition, a string of court opinions, including a 1993 Supreme Court ruling, have supported inmate claims that being held in a smoke-filled prison may constitute cruel and unusual punishment. States have moved at different speeds and with varying success to restrict or ban tobacco. Concerns that inmates would turn violent if they couldn't smoke have so far been unfounded. Inmates are like a lot of people," DeLano says, "if you tell them in advance what's going to happen, they grumble and complain a little bit. And then they kind of get on with it and manage the change." In some prisons where smoking has been banned, tobacco has become the black-market favorite, quickly outpacing narcotics in sales. "It's ultimately going to be the national norm," says Horn, who instituted limited smoking restrictions in 1995 when he ran Pennsylvania's prisons. "It's the smart thing to do. It's the right thing to do." Even so, the growing tobacco black market has raised some concerns. In Colorado, where the state's nearly 20,000 prisoners were barred from smoking in 1999 prison employees were barred a year later the price of a smuggled cigarette is now $10, says Alison Morgan, spokeswoman for the Colorado Department of Corrections. Reginald Wilkinson, director of the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, which has 32 prisons and nearly 44,000 prisoners, says black-market tobacco doesn't replace the demand for marijuana and other drugs; it only adds to the list of contraband. Ohio has moved slowly on banning tobacco. Some institutions provide alternative housing for non-smoking inmates. New prisons must be smoke-free. But the vast majority of state inmates still live in prisons where smoking is allowed. In 1994, Texas became one of the first states to ban smoking. Last year, the state cracked down on smuggling by making it a felony to provide tobacco to inmates. State Rep. Terri Hodge of Dallas, a smoker who proposed the new law, says it was necessary to stop the growing black market. The Federal Bureau of Prisons, in making its facilities smoke-free last week, tried to ease the change by offering smoking-cessation programs to prisoners and inmates, along with a supply of nicotine patches. Inmates must pay for their patches. The guards may get them for free. The federal correctional employees union fought the smoking ban by arguing that prison guards working long shifts in locked-down facilities would not have the luxury of stepping outside for a smoke. The union took its demands for indoor smoking areas to a binding arbitration panel in 2001 and lost.
Well, that does it. I ain't goin' to jail no more. Screw 'em!
Maybe now more prissy anti-smokers will break the law knowing they won't be exposed to ETS in jail...but Bubba doesn't smoke either...except after sex with anti-smokers butts...
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Fletis Humplebacker wrote:
Well, that does it. I ain't goin' to jail no more. Screw 'em!
Bwahahahaaaaaaa! Ill-timed cigarette lands man in jail By Camera staff July 19, 2004 A man's propensity to light up, and his stubbornness when caught, netted him at least two nights in jail and a likely appearance before a judge for smoking in a Boulder Community Hospital room. Boulder police officers booked Siphan Saengpraseuth, 33, at the Boulder County Jail on Saturday evening after hospital staff members asked that he be ticketed for smoking in a room connected to three other patients' at the hospital, 1100 Balsam Ave. A nurse reported smelling cigarette smoke as she treated a patient next to Saengpraseuth, seeing Saengpraseuth smoking and then taking the cigarette from him and putting it out before telling an officer arriving at the hospital's emergency room. The officer wrote a ticket on the municipal charge of "smoking where prohibited" and gave it to Saengpraseuth to sign. "I refuse ... take me jail," he responded, according to a police report. Officers urged Saengpraseuth several times to sign the summons - which would have allowed him to remain free - but the Longmont resident refused, reports said. Boulder code has, since 1995, prohibited smoking in most indoor spaces except private homes or areas of bars and restaurants that are enclosed with separate ventilation systems. Violations of the smoking ban can carry fines of up to $1,000. Saengpraseuth remained at the jail overnight Sunday with a bond of $100.
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