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Ottawa

Smoking bylaw should have full patio ban

A report from Ottawa Public Health and bylaw services recommends no smoking at beaches, patios and city parks and does not promote a patio smoking curfew.

Report goes to Ottawa Board of Health Feb. 6

Smoking bylaw expansion

13 years ago
Duration 2:08
Patios, beaches, parks and other city properties could soon be all smoke-free.

Ottawa Public Health and bylaw officials want toban all smoking onpublic beaches, parks, outdoor patios and terraces and any other municipal properties, according to a report released Monday.

There werethree specificrecommendations made. They are:

  • Increasing cessation services and programs for all residents.
  • Expanding Ottawas smoke-free regulations to make all municipal properties, including parks and beaches, and bar and restaurant patios smoke-free.
  • Implementing public education campaigns and a community engagement strategy to decrease the number of youth who start smoking.

Public health officials came to these conclusions after holdingfive separate public consultations over three months looking for feedback, which wrapped up 10 days ago.

They said there was strong public support and referenced a 2011 Ipsos Reid poll that 77 per cent of respondents support smoke-free parks and playgrounds and smoke-free municipal properties and 73 per cent support smoke-free patios.

Report on smoking bylaw expansion rules out patio curfews

A report from Dr. Isra Levy, the city's chief medical officer of health,bylaw officials and Coun. Diane Holmes, chairwoman of the Ottawa Board of Health, alsooutlined why patio curfews will not work. That idea had been suggested in the past.

Ottawa's smoking bylaw could soon be expanded to cover patios, beaches and other city properties. (iStock)

"Designated smoking areas and patio curfews are not recommended due to enforcement complexities, the health hazard of second-hand smoke and the risk of negative role modelling to children, especially in areas where they play," the report read.

The ban would not extend to roads and sidewalks, however.

Dr. Levy said the recommendations are aimed at protecting children and non-smokers from second hand smoke.

"We're doing this because second-hand smoke is a health hazard," said Levy.

"We know that it can be as toxic outdoors as indoors and sadly every year, close to a thousand people in Ottawa die of tobacco-related illnesses. We also know that smoke-free regulation works. There is strong correlation between smoke-free regulation and reduced smoking rates and reduced exposure to second-hand smoke, as well as an increase in attempts to quit smoking," he said.

15%of Ottawa residents smoke

The goal of the proposed bylawis to prevent the dangers of second-hand smoke anddecrease the number of smokers in Ottawa, which isalmost 15 per cent of residents orabout 105,000 people.

The smoking rate has levelled off since 2005 after declining constantlyin earlier years.

They will present their recommendations to the board of health Feb. 6. before going to the community and protective services committee on Feb. 15. If it passes committee, city council will look at the proposal Feb. 22.

Two east Ottawa councillors, Stephen Blais and Bob Monette, have already publicly debated a stricter smoking ban.