Newport delays smoking ban decision
Lolita Harper
City officials put out a burning desire to ban smoking on public
beaches on Tuesday, saying they will wait to reexamine the issue
after summer.
On the heels of the Malibu City Council’s decision on Monday to
ban smoking on its beaches, Newport Beach council members again
examined the pros and cons of outlawing cigarettes along their
stretch of the Pacific.
Council members agreed during a study session to put the ban on
hold to watch how other cities that have adopted such laws handle
enforcement during the busy summer season, Councilman John Heffernan
said, adding that the council disagrees on the issue.
“We are split going forward,” he said.
The issue will be handed to the Parks, Beaches and Recreation
Commission to keep track of, and will return to the council sometime
in the fall, officials said.
Mayor Tod Ridgeway said he considered it to be a positive,
“well-meant” move that allows the city to take a closer look at a
possible ordinance, without rushing into anything.
“We would need to evaluate where there were [to be] smoking
zones,” Ridgeway said. “Where would a nonsmoking zone end? At the
sidewalk? In the parking lot? Would it be just around the pier or on
the pier?”
Stephanie Barger of Earth Resource Foundation, who lead the charge
in the smoking ban, said she was disappointed that the council missed
the perfect time -- summer -- to make a difference in the pollution
on the beach.
“The public came out overwhelmingly in support. I don’t think
certain members of the council are representing their public,” Barger
said.
While she is upset, Barger said she would want to see the ban pass
only when the whole city embraces it and is fully educated.
Pressure to prohibit nicotine puffers on public sands and piers
came from Barger and the Earth Resource Foundation in Costa Mesa,
which spearheaded a similar unsuccessful effort in November, citing a
main concern of litter but also of the effects of second-hand smoke.
The foundation started surveying people around the pier in
Huntington Beach last March and found a majority of respondents
favored smoke-free areas at the beach and surrounding areas.
Newport leaders pondered the idea in November but abandoned it
because of the difficulty in enforcing it.
But then students from Newport Harbor High School increased the
pressure on council members in April, holding a press conference
about the alarming number of cigarette butts they had found during a
recent beach cleanup. They marched into a Newport Beach council
meeting and again asked leaders to reconsider the ban.
It was their continued effort that got the issue a second look.
Students in coach Scott Morlan’s surfing class adopted the
smoke-free beach initiative as their class project. They and students
in the Earth Resource Foundation Club collected about 700 signatures
on petitions for a beach smoking ban.
Morlan said his students were disappointed Tuesday to learn their
proposal had been kicked down to a commission. “The kids felt great
support in the beginning and walked out [of the study session]
feeling somewhat dismissed,” Morlan said.
Once in the parking lot, others in attendance congratulated the
students on a job well done and they felt a little better, Morlan
said. Barger was one who said she “was very proud” of the high school
students.
“All in all, it was a good experience for them,” Morlan said.
Beach smoking bans have already been approved in Santa Monica, San
Clemente, Los Angeles, Oceanside and most recently, Sydney,
Australia.
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