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Pre-emption and Local Control Bill Roach, Office of the Attorney General Threase Harms-Hassoun, CAFE Iowa CAN.

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Presentation on theme: "Pre-emption and Local Control Bill Roach, Office of the Attorney General Threase Harms-Hassoun, CAFE Iowa CAN."— Presentation transcript:

1 Pre-emption and Local Control Bill Roach, Office of the Attorney General Threase Harms-Hassoun, CAFE Iowa CAN

2 Smoking Prohibition Chapter 142B of the Code of Iowa prohibits smoking in public places or public meetings except in designated smoking areas. The term “public place” is defined as “any enclosed indoor areas used by the general public or serving as a place of work” at least 250 square feet in size.

3 The definition also sets forth a list of additional places included All restaurants with seating capacity greater than 50. All retail stores, lobbies, malls, offices, waiting rooms, and other commercial establishments. Public transportation within the state. Educational and health care facilities. Theaters, auditoriums, indoor arenas and meeting rooms.

4 Exceptions Tobacco stores. A private enclosed office occupied by a smoker. Dorm rooms. Hotel/motel rooms. A resident’s room in a health care facility. Factories, warehouses, and comparable workplaces not usually frequented by the general public (employee cafeterias are covered).

5 Preemption “Preemption” refers to the power of state government to forbid localities from passing ordinances relating to certain subject areas. NO PREEMPTION = LOCAL CONTROL.

6 Preemption Language “Enforcement of this chapter shall be implemented in an equitable manner throughout the state. For the purpose of equitable and uniform implementation, application, and enforcement of state and local laws and regulations, the provisions of this chapter shall supersede any local law or regulation which is inconsistent with or conflicts with the provisions of this chapter”. [Iowa Code 142B.6]

7 Chronology Prior to 2000 ---- Iowa was presumed to be a preemption state.

8 The Law Also Says “Smoking areas may be designated by persons having custody of control of public places, except in places in which smoking is prohibited by the fire marshal or by other law, ordinance (emphasis added), or regulation.” [Iowa Code 142B.2 (2)]

9 Chronology November, 2000 ---- Attorney General Tom Miller issued an opinion indicating that state law in regard to SHS did not preempt local regulation.

10 Chronology August, 2001 --- The City of Ames passed the first Iowa ordinance increasing the secondhand smoke protections beyond those set forth in state law. September, 2001---- Some Ames restaurants, with the financial backing of Phillip Morris, sued the city.

11 Chronology February 2002 ---- Iowa District Court judge ruled that the ordinance was valid, and that there was no preemption. May 7, 2003 ---- Iowa Supreme Court overturned the District Court saying that Iowa communities are preempted from adopting ordinances inconsistent with Chapter 142B.

12 Proposed Language to Change State Law A city or county may provide for the enforcement, by ordinance, of standards and requirements that are higher or more restrictive than those imposed by this chapter. A local law may eliminate or limit the exemptions specified in subsection 1 of section 142B.2, may prohibit designated smoking areas notwithstanding subsection 2 of section 142B2, and may eliminate or limit the provisions of subsection 3 of section 142B.2.

13 Until the Law is Changed, We Cannot Add or subtract from list provided by the legislature as to where smoking is allowed or prohibited. Change the balancing of rights and prerogatives decided by the legislature in Chapter 142B.

14 Be We Can Conduct educational programs to inform about the dangers of second hand smoke. Restrict SHS in public places (buildings, vehicles) where the city council or board of supervisors is acting as custodian. Enact strong tobacco policies in schools by act of school board acting as custodian. Inform and persuade businesses to voluntarily go smoke free.

15 Local Action is Important Important part of comprehensive plan. Social change occurs at the local level. The campaigns themselves are as important as the result. Big Tobacco can’t be everywhere. State changes have occurred only after local communities have led the way.

16 Attorney General’s Office Assistance Technical assistance on matters of law, strategy, communications and planning. Some limited assistance with direct communications.

17 We Are Winning! 4,811 U.S. cities now have some form of 100% workplace ban as the result of local or state action. 35% of U.S. population is covered. Public opinion is with us.

18 CAFE Iowa Citizen Action Network

19 Overview Mission Local Control v. Statewide Ban History Goals Accomplishments 2005 Legislative Plan What can WE do What YOU can do

20 Mission CAFE Iowa CAN supports restoring local control to Iowa communities to protect the health of Iowans by passing and enforcing tobacco free environment policies.

21 Local Control v. Statewide Ban Ease of enactment – Industry has more money and influence at the state level than the local level – Big Tobacco prefers to fight one battle at the state level Ease of enforcement and compliance – Local enforcement agencies are accessible – Compliance rates are higher for local ordinances

22 Why local control Supports a larger goal: societal rejection of tobacco use. Education, Education, Education The current state law forces people to accept a one- size-fits-all state standard that does not protect health. Local control gives communities the power to find a solution tailored to the concerns of people in the area. Local standards are easier to enforce because they emerge from a community discussion about what works best for that area.

23 History May 2003 Supreme Court Decision Fall 2003 founded CAFE Iowa and CAFE Iowa CAN CAFE Iowa CAN as a grassroots organization CAFE Iowa as an education organization Communities joined initiative Established SWATT Teams Introduced legislation 2004 session Established 501(c)3 and 501(c)4 status

24 Goals 5,000 members Educate communities across the state Pass law allowing for local control Provide technical assistance Implement clean air ordinances in local communities Secure additional funding

25 Accomplishments 21 communities have joined the effort 250+ individual members Secured legislative and grassroots counsel Introduced bi-partisan legislation Engaged media in issue Secured grant funding

26 2005 Session Roadmap Demonstrate public support Mobilize CAFE members Secure individual bi-partisan legislative support

27 What can CAFE Iowa & CAN do Provide training and technical support through consultants and SWATT members Legislative updates Be your voice at the Capitol Keep you informed through monthly updates Networking opportunities

28 What YOU can do Join CAFE Iowa CAN Organize a coalition in your community Recruit others to join Demonstrate public support Mobilize others

29 Demonstrate Public Support Letters to the editor Opinion editorials News stories Circulate petitions Organize a coalition to work on SHS issues in your community Legislative district meetings Community Forums

30 Mobilize CAFE Members Attend legislative forums Contact your legislators for a personal visit Respond to action alerts Attend legislative breakfast Attend special events – Trainings – Fundraisers

31 Secure Legislative Support Monitor feedback Collaborate with member organization lobbyists Grasstops mobilization – ID grasstops in your community

32 We CAN do it! We are a resource for local communities. Please don’t hesitate to contact us for general information or technical assistance. We have a wealth of resources that are available to you. Please help us build our network. We will not be able to accomplish our goals if we don’t have members and if we don’t mobilize.

33 Mark Your Calendars January 10, 2005 Start of the Legislative Session February 3, 2005 CAFE Iowa CAN Training and Legislative Reception

34 Questions


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