City to decide on beach smoking ban
Andrew Edwards
Laguna Beach moved one step closer Tuesday to joining a growing
number of coastal cities aiming to stamp out smoking on the beaches.
The City Council gave preliminary approval to an ordinance that
would prohibit smoking at city beaches with a 4-0 vote, Councilman
Steve Dicterow was absent. The council ordered city staffers to draw
up detailed plans to install no smoking signs and ashcans by the time
the ordinance will be up for final approval.
Final approval could come as early as the first City Council
meeting in October, City Manager Ken Frank said.
If passed, the new ordinance is expected to go into effect on July
1, 2005. If the law is passed, smokers could face a $100 fine if
caught lighting up on the beach, Frank said.
However, officials emphasized the point of the new law is not to
write tickets, but to simply keep the beaches smoke free.
Citations will be intended as a last resort in case a smoker
ignores instructions from a lifeguard or police officer to snuff out
their cigarette.
“I can’t imagine that happening,” Frank said.
Councilwomen Elizabeth Pearson and Toni Iseman have both backed
council action to put an end to smoking on the beaches. Both have
said that too many cigarettes end up discarded on the beach.
“Cigarette butts are a big pollutant of the ocean, and it takes
over 10 years for a cigarette butt to dissolve and disappear,” she
said.
Both Pearson and Iseman liked that the proposed ordinance would
seek smokers’ cooperation rather than hit them with fines.
“I am not very high on giving citations,” Pearson said. “It’s very
low-key, which is exactly what I wanted.”
Citations may not even be practical on the beach, Iseman said,
since many beachgoers wouldn’t carry identification along with their
swimsuits. She said she wants to focus on posting notices that remind
beachgoers not to puff away.
“I hope that we do follow through with the signage that says the
beaches are smoke-free zones,” she said.
A couple of smokers found at Main Beach on Wednesday said they
could live with a smoking ban in order to keep the surf clean.
“I care about the ocean and I stick my butts in the sand and it’s
absurd,” smoker Mike Kuester admitted. “It probably should be
stopped.”
If unable to smoke on the beach, smoker Morgan Ryan would simply
light up somewhere else, she said. A ban would not be a major
inconvenience for her.
“It wouldn’t really matter to me,” she said. “If that’s the way it
was, that’s the way it was.”
The Newport Beach City Council banned smoking on beaches in that
city on Tuesday.
In Orange County, the trend was started by a ban in San Clemente,
and smoking on the beaches was also recently banned Huntington Beach.
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