Smokers’ lights go out on city beaches
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Jeff Benson
Make no butts about it. Smoking will no longer be permitted on
Newport’s beachfront.
Newport Beach became the third Orange County city to ban smoking
from its beaches Tuesday after a 5-2 City Council vote. Several other
Southern California cities, including San Clemente and Huntington
Beach, have passed laws prohibiting smoking on their beaches in
recent months.
Mayor Tod Ridgeway said the ban won’t likely be enforced unless a
police officer spots a smoker somewhere along Newport’s 6.2 miles of
sandy beach or on the pier. Instead, Ridgeway believes the city will
resort to self-policing of smoking on the beachfront so police, fire
and lifeguard crews can stick to crime and safety concerns.
“It’s about respect and courtesy, and I think that with
self-policing, it’ll be the same way on the beaches,” Ridgeway said.
It’s still legal to smoke in the parking lots and away from the
sand, as well as the unincorporated Crystal Cove State Beach, he
said. The ordinance must go through a second reading before it can be
passed into law and before “No Smoking” signs are posted.
Councilman Steve Bromberg, who hadn’t originally supported the ban
because he felt it would be too difficult to enforce, said Tuesday
that fellow Councilman Steve Rosansky had helped change his mind.
“I do believe people are basically law-abiding,” Rosansky said at
the meeting. “I don’t envision the Police Department handing out a
lot of tickets.”
Even smoker and Huntington Beach resident Brett Ridenour approved
of the decision.
“I am a smoker,” Ridenour said during the session. “I’m proud of
this and support this, and I think other smokers will too, because I
know what kind of litter it can create.”
The dissenting votes came from Councilmen Gary Adams and Dick
Nichols. Nichols said he questioned the hazards of inhaling
second-hand smoke and felt the new law was too extreme.
“I think we’re going overboard,” Nichols said. “If it were an
ordinance to ban the littering of butts, it would be different.”
The decision came four months after Councilman John Heffernan
asked staff members to review the issue, and three weeks after
Newport Beach’s Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission approved the
ban. The item was then passed on to the council for approval.
The decision appealed to nonsmokers visiting Newport Pier who
complained about the pollution and health risks.
“I think it’s great,” said Matt Sullivan of San Clemente. “You
have to sit in everyone’s smoke downwind. They say cigarette butts
are the biggest polluting factor in the world.”
* JEFF BENSON is the news assistant and may be reached at (949)
574-4298 or by e-mail at [email protected]. Deirdre Newman
contributed to this report.
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