on 23-12-2013 06:08 PM
We all know what the effects of passive smoking are and yet in 2013 you can't access any major shopping centre entrance without passing through cigarette smoke.
Today, at a major shopping centre in Melbourne we endured cigarette smoke whilst entering and leaving the complex. A cigarette tray was affixed next to a doorway (supplied by the shopping centre). This was 1 metre away from a doorway and 1 metre away from a pedestrian zebra crossing which leads to the entrance. How ridiculous is this? Young children, pregnant women and elderly use the crossing to enter the complex including my wife and I. Shopping centres are private property and they can ban smoking on their land if they want to but they have not. Why not?
50 metres away there was a childrens playground with smoking permitted on the fenceline. How ridiculous is this?
The sign read "No smoking within 5 metres". Which means smoking is permitted as much you like after 5 metres. Guess what? The fenceline of the playground is after the 5 metres. Silly or what?
Next time you visit your shopping centre please observe these silly ashtrays next to doorways and make yourself heard. I have reported this to centre management and will continue to do so until it is changed. Please do the same.
on 23-12-2013 06:11 PM
OK
on 23-12-2013 06:22 PM
Try fighting your way through smoke at any public hospital doorway.
Namby- pamby security guys won't risk saying anything, I asked them - so who's
going to police these policies/laws?
on 23-12-2013 06:32 PM
on 23-12-2013 06:35 PM
on 23-12-2013 06:40 PM
those signs are useless. There are always people sitting right next to, or even leaning on the signs that say no smoking.
I HATE it with a passion. I agree that I should not have to walk through cigarette smoke to get in or out of a centre or hospital, but no-one enforces the law.
on 23-12-2013 06:45 PM
U_I: " We all know what the effects of passive smoking are"
Do we (you)?
There is NO clear link between passive smoking and lung cancer, scientists claim
Scientists from Stanford University claim only people living with a smoker for over 30 years might be more likely to develop lung cancer. The research, which studied 76,000 women, adds to a body of evidence that argues there is no link between second-hand smoke and lung cancer.
"Between 1959 and 1989 two American researchers named James Enstrom and Geoffrey Kabat surveyed no few than 118,094 Californians. Fierce anti-smoking campaigners themselves, they began the research because they wanted to prove once and for all what a pernicious, socially damaging habit smoking was. Their research was initiated by the American Cancer Society and supported by the anti-smoking Tobacco Related Disease Research Program.
At least it was at first. But then something rather embarrassing happened. Much to their surprise, Kabat and Enstrom discovered that exposure to environmental tobacco smoke (ie passive smoking), no matter how intense or prolonged, creates no significantly increased risk of heart disease or lung cancer.
Thw WHO concluded in 1998 after a seven-year study that the correlation between "passive smoking" and lung cancer was not "statistically significant." A 2002 report by the Greater London Assembly agreed. So too did an investigation by the House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee."
U_I, the vehicles passing over "your" zebra crossing, and next to the school, will be causing more harm from their exhaust pollution than that from smokers in the open.
nɥºɾ
23-12-2013 06:57 PM - edited 23-12-2013 07:00 PM
on 23-12-2013 07:00 PM
23-12-2013 07:06 PM - edited 23-12-2013 07:07 PM
There is NO clear link between passive smoking and lung cancer, scientists claim
Not at all what I was talking about. I have emphysema and do not
want to walk through clouds of smoke where I find it difficult to breathe.
I don't stand there wondering if I'm going to get cancer from passive smoking.
I would just like my airspace not to be contaminated while I fight to breathe
through it