Bars | Politics.MyNC.com

Tag Archive | "bars"

New Persona For Bars After State’s Smoking Ban Takes Affect

Tags: , , ,


By Laura Giovanelli and Michael Hewlett
JOURNAL REPORTERs

Historically and culturally, smoking and drinking go together like whiskey and water, gin and tonic, rum and Coke.

It is just after 4 on a sunny Thursday afternoon, and some of the regulars are already gathered at Finnigan’s Wake on Trade Street.

Among them is Allison Chrapek, holding forth while smoking a Pall Mall and nursing a Bud Light.
Asked how long she has smoked, one of her friends jokes that she started right out of the womb. Not quite true, Chrapek said, but she has been smoking for more than 20 years, even as the places where she is allowed to smoke have diminished.

Last week, Gov. Bev Perdue signed into law legislation that will take away something that might have once seemed, especially in tobacco country, an inalienable right – to light up with friends at a bar.

As of Jan. 2, smoking will be banned in all North Carolina restaurants and bars. The legislation marks a historic break with the state’s long and lucrative tobacco legacy. North Carolina is the first major tobacco-producing state to pass such a restrictive ban on smoking. Virginia, which passed a ban earlier, allows smoking in separately vented rooms of bars and restaurants.

Chrapek said that it doesn’t do much good to get too upset.

“It may help me quit smoking,” she said. “I know I should.”

Looking Back
Before cigarettes, it was cigars.

Customers used to offer bartenders a cigar as a friendly gesture because the bartenders weren’t supposed to drink on the job, according to Madelon Powers, a history professor at the University of New Orleans and the author of Faces Along the Bar: Lore and Order in the Workingman’s Saloon, 1870-1920.

In the 1920s, cigarette smoking grew along with the Prohibition-era speak-easies, jazz clubs and cabarets of a nightlife scene. From then on, it also became more acceptable for women to smoke in public, especially in clubs.

“There are classic photographs of jazz musicians playing from the ’40s with curls of smoke … coming up from their cigarettes as they’re getting ready to play their saxophone,” said Lewis Erenberg, a sociology professor at Loyola University Chicago.

But the curls are increasing becoming a thing of the past.

Some people who smoke in bars don’t smoke anywhere else, said David Grazian, a sociology professor at the University of Pennsylvania who studies nightlife culture. The smoking they do is part of their “nocturnal identities,” he said.

“This nightlife persona that they create for themselves involves a dramatic way of dressing and a very public way of behaving,” Grazian said. “And smoking has always played a part in that. It’s always been a way of performing coolness.”

Bumming a cigarette, asking for a light – these are rituals intertwined with nightlife culture, conversation starters and ice breakers.

Loopholes in Ban
It seems unthinkable that North Carolina would ban smoking in restaurants and bars, especially to people in Winston-Salem, home of R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.

Many people still recall when downtown smelled of tobacco because of all the manufacturing plants.
Angela Engstrom said she took up smoking 10 years ago when she flew into Winston-Salem from her native Scotland. She said she landed at the airport and just remembered that everyone was smoking.

“I found myself a pub and that was it,” she said last week, while smoking a Marlboro and sipping champagne at the West End Opera House.

Some opponents of North Carolina’s smoking ban argue that there is an apparent elitism written into the ban. Although smoking will be prohibited in all regular bars, including those that charge private-membership fees, two types of establishments are exempted: cigar bars (which must get a certain amount of their revenue from the sale of cigars) and country clubs.

That means that a wealthy smoker will still be able to enjoy a cigar at his country club, but a working stiff can’t have a cigarette at the corner bar.

The loopholes bother Lea Thulberry, the general manager at Finnigan’s Wake. She said that she doesn’t have a problem with the smoking ban, but she doesn’t understand why there are exceptions if the smoking ban was enacted, as legislators said, for health reasons. “It just feels like they’re trying to fool you,” Thulberry said.

State Rep. Hugh Holliman, the chief sponsor of the smoking-ban bill, acknowledged that the exemptions are “somewhat inconsistent.”

But Holliman, D-Davidson, said that he and other supporters of the ban had to agree to the exemptions in order to get the bill passed.

“I would have preferred to make everybody nonsmoking,” Holliman said. “In the legislature, you have to compromise.”

Number of Smokers on Decline
Whether North Carolina’s smoking ban hurts bars and restaurants won’t be known until next year. One thing to keep in mind is that smoking bans don’t necessarily get bargoers to stop smoking. They simply walk outside.

In New York, which has had a ban on smoking in bars and restaurants since 2003, the “walk outside” effect resulted in increased complaints about noise, though that might also have something to do with how dense the city’s business districts are.

Overall, however, there have been numerous studies about public-smoking restrictions, and most have found little effect on either revenue or employment at bars and restaurants.

“There’s an enormous amount of good-quality evidence in the scientific literature that demonstrates that these clean-indoor-air policies have not shown large-scale effects, or even modest effects,” said Elizabeth Klein, a professor of public health at Ohio State University. Klein recently completed a study of local smoking restrictions in Minnesota that showed no meaningful effect on employment after the restrictions were put in place.

North Carolina’s smoking ban also comes as the number of smokers has declined – 20 percent of Americans now smoke, as do 23 percent of North Carolinians. That means that smoking has become less important as a lure for bars.

The ban also could bring back people who now avoid bars because of the smoke – and the souvenir of its smell, lingering on your clothes.

Some smokers say they will still go to their favorite bars, even if they can’t light up.

But Harry Knabb, who was having a smoke last week at Finnigan’s Wake, said that the ban angers him. He said he believes that the danger of secondhand smoke has been overblown. The ban, he said, is government intruding on private business.

“I’ll come here, but I won’t stay as long,” Knabb said. “That’s where I think the erosion will happen.”

An Option for Diehards
If the image of the bar is a haze of smoke amid jazz music or sporting events, there is a positive side to the aroma of tobacco.

Take a deep sniff when you head into a nightclub after Jan. 2. In states where smoking is banned in restaurants and bars, the most prominent scent in nightclubs has become cleaning products, said Grazian, the University of Pennsylvania professor, “whereas cigarette smoke used to be able to cover up glass cleaner, which isn’t the most sensuous of fragrances.”

And what are people to do with their nondrinking hand once the ban takes effect?

Grazian said that cell phones are replacing cigarettes as the crutch of solitary bar- and clubgoers.

“It’s a device that facilitates being alone in public.”

Indeed, there’s even an app for it.

The iPhone’s Electric Smoke application allows users to puff away on a virtual cigarette, which also includes trivia about the health benefits and savings by not lighting up.

Assembly Approves Smoking Ban

Tags: , , , ,


RALEIGH, N.C. — Legislators in the country’s top tobacco-growing state have approved a smoking ban for restaurants and bars across North Carolina.The state House voted 62-56 on Wednesday to approve changes adopted in the state Senate.

Gov. Beverly Perdue has 10 days to sign the bill into law or veto it before it would become law without her signature. More than 30 states have already passed similar restrictions.

Perdue said in a statement released Wednesday that she will sign the bill.

“Today is an important and historic day for North Carolina – a day to applaud Rep. Hugh Holliman and Sen. William Purcell for protecting the health of North Carolinians,” she said. “I have vigorously supported efforts to reduce and eliminate smoking and this bill will help more North Carolina citizens avoid the dangers of secondhand smoke.”

The legislation was backed by health advocates and opposed by lawmakers from areas were tobacco-growing and cigarette factories are big employers.

Opponents including Republican Rep. David Lewis of rural Harnett County complained the ban took away the opportunity for restaurant and bar owners to decide how to run their businesses.

NC House Passes Smoking Ban That Exempts Bars

Tags: , , , ,


RALEIGH, N.C. — The North Carolina House has approved a bid to ban secondhand smoke from restaurants and other businesses where children are present.

Lawmakers in the country’s top tobacco-growing state voted 72-45 on Thursday to send the proposed limit on secondhand smoke to the state Senate, where top leaders said they expect the limited smoking ban to pass.

A broader proposal that would have banned smoking from all workplaces, including bars and restaurants, was changed Wednesday.

The measure now would ban smoking in businesses that employ or serve anyone under age 18, but not to most other businesses.

The already weak enforcement provisions survived efforts on Thursday to make fines for businesses that break the law even more rare.

Poll: Cell Phones, Annexation, Non-Smoking

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,


A majority of North Carolinians favor laws to ban cell phone use while driving, even though more than half of mobile phone users report doing this regularly, according to the latest Elon University Poll. Respondents to the poll also supported a statewide ban on smoking in public places. The poll, conducted Feb. 22-26, surveyed 758 North Carolina residents and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.6 percentage points. 

Driving and cell phones
Cell phones are ubiquitous; 88 percent of the people surveyed own one. Eighty percent of residents believe the use of cell phones while driving decreases highway safety, but at the same time 54 percent of those cell phone users use a phone while they’re behind the wheel. Of the people who drive while on the phone, 56 percent do not use a hands-free device. Two out of three (65 percent) people say driving while on the phone should be illegal except in the case of an emergency.

“Though they recognize that it is dangerous and confess to doing it, citizens apparently won’t stop driving and talking unless a change in the law forces them to do so,” said Hunter Bacot, director of the Elon University Poll.

Anti-smoking laws
The poll asked respondents a series of questions related to laws that limit smoking in public places and the workplace. Eighty-seven percent agreed that employees have the right to work in a smoke-free environment and 82 percent believe that second-hand smoke is a health threat. A strong majority support local or state laws that ban smoking in all public places, including public buildings, offices, restaurants and bars. Seventy percent support local laws and 67 percent support state laws.

But when asked specifically whether all restaurants and bars should ban smoking, only 51 percent were in favor. And for all places of business, respondents expressed a preference for business action, over government regulation. Sixty-one percent said it should be the individual business owner, not the government, who decides whether smoking should be allowed in a place of business. But 63 percent of those people also believed that business owners have a responsibility to provide a smoke-free workplace.

“As the health implications of tobacco become more salient among citizens, support for anti-smoking policies continues to intensify,” noted Bacot. “I suspect this may be the year that we see North Carolina go smokeless,” Bacot said.

Other issues: Transportation
While 51 percent of North Carolinians oppose collecting tolls to fund statewide transportation projects, 77 percent would like to see commuter railways developed in urban areas and 69 percent of citizens support regional rail systems. Sixty-seven percent of respondents support a state-wide bond referendum to raise money for transportation projects, while 57 percent of residents support giving local governments the option of using a half-cent sales tax to finance local projects. Residents oppose a fee based on the number of miles they drive annually (74%) and increasing the cost of the driver’s license renewal fee (55%).

Other issues: Death penalty
When surveyed about their opinions on the death penalty, residents gravitated toward options other than execution. In an open-ended question about the most appropriate punishment for first-degree murder, 48 percent of respondents identified the death penalty as the most appropriate punishment, while 39 percent reported life in prison a more fitting punishment. Across two questions asking about punishments for people found guilty of first-degree murder, 72 percent of North Carolinians supported life in prison without the possibility of parole and, in a separate question, 58 percent of respondents indicated that they supported the death penalty. When queried about the current moratorium on executions in North Carolina, residents were mixed in their evaluations as 45 percent disagreed with the death penalty moratorium, while 47 percent of North Carolinians agreed with the moratorium.

Other issues: Annexation
Though 41 percent of residents opposed the issue of annexation, indicating they disagreed or strongly disagreed with city councils expanding their city limits by bringing in nearby areas or residents, a similar number (40%) had not given the annexation process much consideration. On questions about whether there should be a waiting period for annexation and to gauge support for citizen initiation of the annexation process, there was similar lack of familiarity as nearly 40 percent of people had not given the process much consideration.
In regard to other statewide issues:
Healthcare:
56 percent support a national health insurance plan
52 percent are satisfied with their current healthcare
50 percent prefer a universal health insurance program
 
Oil Drilling:
66 percent support drilling for oil off the North Carolina coast

Video Content

Candidate Statements

Decision 2008 in your inbox

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner