Kentucky bans tobacco products on most
state properties
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[September 05, 2014] By
Steve Bittenbender
LOUISVILLE (Reuters) - Kentucky, the second
biggest tobacco-producing state in the country, on Thursday banned all
uses of its products on most government properties.
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Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear signed an executive order in
Frankfort prohibiting smoking, the use of smokeless tobacco and
e-cigarettes in more than 3,400 state-owned and leased executive
branch properties.
The order, which also restricts tobacco use in state-owned vehicles,
expands upon a 2006 order that banned smoking inside state
buildings.
"Smoking and tobacco use are the single-biggest causes of
preventable illness and death in our state," Beshear said in a news
release. "This policy will protect non-smokers from the effects of
secondhand smoke, and encourage tobacco users to seek help in
quitting."
Beshear's order takes effect on Nov. 20, coinciding with the Great
American Smokeout, the day every year when the American Cancer
Society encourages smokers to quit, even for one day.
The order does not affect highway rest areas, the state parks,
fairgrounds and selected other sites, which will remain smoke-free
indoors and eventually transition to tobacco-free indoors, the state
said in a news release.
More than 33,000 state employees, about 5,000 of whom claim to use
tobacco products on a regular basis, will be affected by the order,
as will hundreds of thousands of visitors.
More than 28 percent of Kentucky adults smoke, the highest statewide
percentage in the nation, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
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Kentucky is the No. 2 tobacco-producing state in the nation behind
North Carolina, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Beshear said he would continue to support a comprehensive smoke-free
workplace bill in the state legislature. A state House committee
advanced a measure this year, but it was never voted on by the full
state House.
Beshear has said he wants to reduce the percentage of Kentuckians
who use tobacco products over the next five years.
(Reporting by Steve Bittenbender; Editing by David Bailey and Sandra
Maler)
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