Smoking ban mulled
Andrew Edwards
Laguna Beach officials may soon ban smoking on public beaches.
The City Council voted 4-0 April 20 to direct city staffers to
draw up an ordinance prohibiting smoking on public beaches.
Council member Steve Dicterow did not vote on the issue because he
got sick and had to leave the April 20 meeting early.
It’s not known yet when City Council members will vote on the
proposed smoking ban.
Councilwomen Toni Iseman and Elizabeth Pearson have promoted the
smoking ban. Iseman said the smoking ban is a personal issue for her
since she finds so many cigarette butts buried in the sand at beach
cleanups.
“The beach was an ashtray,” she said.
Not only can cigarette butts be found on shore, but they also wash
into the ocean, the backbone of Laguna’s tourist industry.
“Smokers don’t seem to understand they’re polluting the ocean,”
Pearson said.
Putting an end to smoking on the beaches, rather than simply
relying on enforcing litter laws, is needed because discarded
cigarette butts specifically represent a major source of pollution
along the coast, she said.
“This makes it really clear what is polluting,” she said.
Efforts to ban smoking along public beaches have become popular in
Southern California. Officials in San Clemente, Santa Monica and
Solana Beach, a San Diego County city, have moved to ban smoking on
beaches.
The Laguna Beach chapter of the Surfrider Foundation has not yet
taken an official position on the proposal, and the chapter’s
chairman, Rick Wilson, said he personally favored the idea, though
other members of the organization think the problem is not smoking,
but smokers who litter.
Wilson said he understood that argument, but he doesn’t trust that
all smokers would discard their cigarettes properly.
“If there’s an ashtray or trash can 10 feet away, they’re not
going to put it there,” Wilson said.
Smokers enjoying on the beach recently said the city should allow
them to light up, but not to throw cigarettes in the sand.
“Other than the litter it’s not a big deal,” said Web developer
Colin Simning of Laguna Hills, who works in Laguna Beach.
In general, nonsmokers who were asked about the idea were more
likely to agree with the proposed ban. .
“I think it’s a good thing,” Laguna Beach resident Joel Lars said,
adding, smoking could be tolerable in areas set aside for smokers.
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