New Jersey college passes campus wide smoking ban
Patricia Alex
Issue date: 10/19/07 Section: News
Bergen Community College this week is expected to vote to ban smoking on its entire 167-acre campus in Paramus, N.J.
The school would join at least 65 others nationwide in a trend that pushes smokers to the periphery of campus life. In New Jersey, community colleges in Morris, Burlington and Somerset counties also have banned smoking campuswide.
The movement to ban even outdoor smoking has been growing across the country, with colleges, hospitals and even some cities in the vanguard.
"I'm an asthmatic and a former Lung Association president, and I can't wait to ban it," said G. Jeremiah Ryan, Bergen Community's new president. "It's a public-health issue."
It is expected that Bergen Community's board of trustees will approve the ban on Wednesday. It would go into effect in January.
The president of the faculty union, Peter Helff, said he agrees that smokers should be relegated to areas away from the general public. But a total ban is both "a mistake and unenforceable," he said.
"It's an overreaction," said Helff, who is a pipe smoker. "And it will be a severe hardship on some of the people I represent."
Other colleges and universities in New Jersey ban smoking in academic buildings and residence halls, and many require a smoke-free buffer outside buildings. But, so far, campuswide bans have been limited to the community colleges, which are commuter schools.
The concept of a campuswide ban began at a community college in Missouri in 2003 and accelerated after the release in 2006 of the latest Surgeon General's Report detailing the harmful effects of secondhand smoke and the highly addictive nature of tobacco use, said Bronson Frick of the Americans for Nonsmokers' Rights.
"For an educational institution, it's the only sensible policy," Ryan said of Bergen Community. He had no firm estimate of the number of smokers on campus, but nationally about 30 percent of college students smoke.
Bergen Community has more than 15,000 students and about 1,000 staff members. Ryan said the college will offer smoking cessation programs beginning in October. "We're hoping most folks will quit before the ban begins," he said.
The school would join at least 65 others nationwide in a trend that pushes smokers to the periphery of campus life. In New Jersey, community colleges in Morris, Burlington and Somerset counties also have banned smoking campuswide.
The movement to ban even outdoor smoking has been growing across the country, with colleges, hospitals and even some cities in the vanguard.
"I'm an asthmatic and a former Lung Association president, and I can't wait to ban it," said G. Jeremiah Ryan, Bergen Community's new president. "It's a public-health issue."
It is expected that Bergen Community's board of trustees will approve the ban on Wednesday. It would go into effect in January.
The president of the faculty union, Peter Helff, said he agrees that smokers should be relegated to areas away from the general public. But a total ban is both "a mistake and unenforceable," he said.
"It's an overreaction," said Helff, who is a pipe smoker. "And it will be a severe hardship on some of the people I represent."
Other colleges and universities in New Jersey ban smoking in academic buildings and residence halls, and many require a smoke-free buffer outside buildings. But, so far, campuswide bans have been limited to the community colleges, which are commuter schools.
The concept of a campuswide ban began at a community college in Missouri in 2003 and accelerated after the release in 2006 of the latest Surgeon General's Report detailing the harmful effects of secondhand smoke and the highly addictive nature of tobacco use, said Bronson Frick of the Americans for Nonsmokers' Rights.
"For an educational institution, it's the only sensible policy," Ryan said of Bergen Community. He had no firm estimate of the number of smokers on campus, but nationally about 30 percent of college students smoke.
Bergen Community has more than 15,000 students and about 1,000 staff members. Ryan said the college will offer smoking cessation programs beginning in October. "We're hoping most folks will quit before the ban begins," he said.
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Viewing Comments 1 - 2 of 2
Pete
posted 10/20/07 @ 8:46 PM EST
This seems to be a quickly growing trend across the US. It's important to not let young people think that smoking is accepted everywhere. It's the biggest single preventable cause of death in the country. (Continued…)
Sam Nettles
posted 10/21/07 @ 12:34 AM EST
This is another example of a world gone batty. Millions of smokers can attest to the fact that smoking is not a health factor for them. Only junk science says it is. (Continued…)
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