Earth Day Beach Clean Up April 22nd

Join us on April 22nd from 10 AM - 1 PM as the Tobacco Education Network, Surfrider Humboldt and Humboldt Baykeeper celebrate Earth Day 2012 with a clean up of the North Jetty in Samoa. Los Bagels is generously dontating some of their delightful treats and the T.E.N. will be providing free T-shirts and reusable tote bags for the first 50 volunteers. Come on out and help keep our waterways clean of debris. We'll all enjoy a day in the sun (we can always hope)! 

Check out the Surfrider Humboldt pages for more information: 

http://www.facebook.com/SurfriderHumboldt

 

 

Cigarette Clean-up At HSU Nets Over 4500 Butts

Hsumapbuttsw-key

 

In about 4 hours spread out over February 11-12, members of the Humboldt State University Colleges Against Cancer Club (affiliated with the American Cancer Society) and other student volunteers collected approximately 4,629 cigarette butts and 19 pieces of other tobacco trash across the campus.  HSU has a 100% smoke-free policy with exceptions in designated smoking areas. 

You can read a great write up in The Lumberjack Newspaper here: http://thelumberjack.org/news/cigarette-waste-clutters-campus

Stay tuned for a video of this clean-up. 

California's Proposition 29

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 6, 2012

BIG JOLT TO STATE ECONOMY WITH NEW TAX ON CIGARETTES
A new UCSF analysis has found that a state ballot initiative to increase the cigarette tax would create about 12,000 jobs and nearly $2 billion in new economic activity in California.
The study found that the new tax would have a significant effect on the state’s overall economy because Californians would smoke less and spend their money in other ways.
The initiative, the California Cancer Research Act (CCRA), is on the statewide June 5 ballot. If the measure is approved, state cigarette taxes would rise by $1 a pack, generating an estimated $855 million a year for anti-smoking education programs, medical research, and tobacco law enforcement.
“The primary impact to the California economy, besides the effect on health care, is that people will smoke less and send less money out of state,’’ said study author Stanton A. Glantz, PhD, a professor of medicine at UCSF and director of the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education based at UCSF.
Currently, approximately 80 percent of money spent on tobacco products is exported to out-of-state tobacco manufacturers and farmers. No tobacco is grown in California and no cigarettes are manufactured here.
Under the legislation, 60 percent of funds generated by the new tax would go to cancer research and to address other tobacco-related diseases, 20 percent toward tobacco cessation and prevention programs, and 15 percent toward facilities and equipment for health services and research.  The remainder would go to law enforcement to reduce cigarette smuggling and tobacco tax evasion, and to administer the tax.
The state’s independent Legislative Analysts’ Office has calculated that the new tax could save more than 100,000 people from smoking-related deaths.
On September 15, 2011, the UC Board of Regents endorsed the initiative. UC campuses are allowed to use their resources to objectively evaluate a ballot measure’s impact and to provide educational materials and information.
Glantz’ report of the analysis, which estimates both the direct and indirect effects of the initiative on employment and economic activity in California, uses standard estimates of jobs created and economic multipliers categorized by economic sector from the U.S. Department of Commerce. It is available online as part of the University of California’s eScholarship program at http://escholarship.org/uc/item/73g8m5j5#page-3  
If the new tax is approved, the study reports, it would cause some loss of retail jobs due to fewer retail sales – a loss that would be more than offset by a projected 12,000 new jobs in the California economy as a whole as well as in medical research, construction and other activities directly funded by the CCRA.
Altogether, the CCRA would generate a projected $1.9 billion in total economic activity.
A previous UCSF study co-authored by Glantz and James Lightwood, PhD, associate adjunct professor in the UCSF School of Pharmacy, estimated the ballot measure could save California up to $32 billion in health care costs over the next five years. Without the tax, the study concluded, the state’s tobacco control program would become less effective over time because inflation is eroding the five cents per pack currently allocated to tobacco control activities.
The new report notes that as a biomedical research center, UCSF conducts the type of research that the CCRA likely would fund.
UCSF is a leading university dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care.

AB 1278 - Smoking in CA Health Facilities (Update)

Italicized text includes proposed additions to law or the previous version of the bill.
Struck text includes proposed deletions to law or the previous version of the bill. 

(pdf version
AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY JANUARY 26, 2012 
AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY JANUARY 4, 2012 
AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY AUGUST 15, 2011 
AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY MAY 18, 2011 
AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY MARCH 31, 2011 

INTRODUCED BY Assembly Member Hill 
Coauthor: Assembly Member 
Pan 

FEBRUARY 18, 2011 

An act to add Section 1286.5 to the Health and Safety Code, 
relating to health facilities. 


LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST 


AB 1278, as amended, Hill. Health facilities: smoking. 
Existing law establishes various programs for the prevention of 
disease and the promotion of health to be administered by the State 
Department of Public Health, including, but not limited to, a program 
for the licensing and regulation of health facilities. A violation 
of these provisions is a misdemeanor. 
Existing law, with certain exceptions, prohibits smoking in 
patient care areas, waiting rooms, and visiting rooms of specified 
health facilities, including general acute care hospitals. A 
violation of these provisions is an infraction. Existing law 
generally prohibits smoking in the workplace. 
This bill would, for a general acute care hospital, instead, 
prohibit smoking in all areas of the hospital and throughout the 
entire hospital campus, as specified. The bill would require general 
acute care hospitals to post specified signs and train employees on 
the smoking policy. 
The bill would specify that the smoking prohibition does not 
prevent smoking on a hospital campus by a patient if the treating 
physician determines that the patient's treatment will be 
substantially impaired by the denial to the patient of the use of 
tobacco and the physician enters a written order permitting the use 
of tobacco by that patient. 
The bill would also specify that violation of these provisions 
does not constitute either a misdemeanor or an infraction. 
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. 
State-mandated local program: no. 


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS: 

SECTION 1. Section 1286.5 is added to the Health and Safety Code
to read: 
1286.5. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature to encourage and 
assist smokers to quit tobacco use and to reduce the associated risks 
of tobacco and second hand smoke to hospital 
patients, staff, and visitors. 
(b) Notwithstanding Section 1286, and except as provided in 
subdivision (c), on and after March 1, 2013, smoking shall be 
prohibited in all areas of a general acute care hospital and 
throughout the entire hospital campus, including, but not limited to, 
buildings, parking areas, plazas, vehicles, underground passages, 
and sidewalks, unless there is a government-mandated exception. 
Public thoroughfares and sidewalks adjacent to the general acute care 
hospital but not owned by the hospital are not subject to this 
section. 
(c) (1) This section shall not prevent smoking on a hospital 
campus by a patient if the treating physician determines that the 
patient's treatment will be substantially impaired by the denial to 
the patient of the use of tobacco and the physician enters a written 
order permitting the use of tobacco by that patient. 
(2) This section shall not apply to property owned or leased by 
the hospital that is distinct from, and not part of, the principal 
medical campus if the property is used for nonhealth 
care-related 
purposes unrelated to health care 

(d) A general acute care hospital shall post signs stating that 
smoking is prohibited on the entire hospital campus at building 
entrances and in other conspicuous locations. New employees shall be 
advised of the nonsmoking policy during orientation and current 
employees shall be informed of the policy at least 60 days prior to 
implementation. 
(e) A general acute care hospital may provide interested patients, 
visitors, and staff with information on, or refer them to, smoking 
cessation services. 
(f) A city, county, or city and county may adopt and enforce 
additional smoking and tobacco control ordinances, regulations, or 
policies that are no less stringent than the applicable standards 
under this section. 
(g) A violation of this section shall not be subject to Section 
1290. 

http://www.aroundthecapitol.com/billtrack/text.html?bvid=20110AB127894AMD

 

 

[tobaccoeducationnetwork] State of Tobacco Control 2012

Hi Lou,

I coudn't find out how our county did with any of the three emails you sent. The URL's didn't work, even when i copied and pasted them.

Sylvia

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