Laserfiche WebLink
ITEM #4 <br />CITY OF COLTON <br />AGENDA REPORT <br />rUK UUUNUIL IVICC I wj%j VI' IVUyyI wtn c i, avvv <br />TO: Honorable Mayor and City Council Members <br />FROM: Bill Smith — Community Services Director <br />SUBJECT: Request Approval of Ordinance Amending Sections 12.24.010 and <br />12.24.065, and Adding Section 12.24.115 to the Colton Municipal <br />Code Relating to Prohibition of the Use of Tobacco in City Parks <br />DATE: November 1, 2006 <br />BACKGROUND: <br />Over 40 cities in California have passed Ordinances prohibiting smoking and/or the use of tobacco <br />products in their city parks. Notably, the Cities of Redlands and Yucaipa have recently passed such <br />Ordinances. The City of Colton has, over the past year, received at least two requests from <br />residents to enact similar legislation prohibiting smoking in our city parks. <br />After discussion of the subject at their meeting of September 20, 2006, the Colton Recreation & <br />Parks Commission directed staff to prepare an Ordinance for recommendation to City Council, <br />prohibiting the use of all tobacco products in city parks. This Ordinance was prepared by the City <br />Attorney, with input from staff, and was presented to the Recreation & Parks Commission at their <br />meeting of October 18, 2006. At this meeting, the Commission voted 6-0 to recommend approval <br />of the attached Ordinance to the Colton City Council. <br />DISCUSSION/ANALYSIS: <br />Tobacco use remains the number one preventable cause of disease and death in California, killing <br />more than 40,000 Californians each year, or about 118 people everyday. Smoking costs California <br />nearly $16 billion annually in medical costs. The California Air Resources Board has put <br />secondhand smoke in the same category as the most toxic automotive and industrial air pollutants <br />by categorizing it as a toxic air contaminant. The U.S. Surgeon General has concluded that there is <br />no risk-free level of exposure to secondhand smoke. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency <br />(EPA) lists secondhand smoke as a Class A carcinogen, for which there is no safe level of <br />exposure. <br />Children are at special risk of lung damage and illness from inhaled smoke. Studies have shown a <br />clear link between environmental tobacco smoke and asthma in young people. Passive smoking <br />worsens asthma in teens and may cause up to 26,000 new cases of asthma each year. Children <br />with allergies and nasal congestion, who are also exposed to tobacco smoke, are up to 6 times <br />more likely than others to have persistent middle ear infections. <br />Our parks are a significant gathering area for our children, and countless psychological studies <br />suggest that children imitate what they see. This information, combined with the statistics above, <br />indicates that smoking in our city parks presents a health hazard to our youth, both through health <br />effects of secondhand smoke, and through increasing the likelihood that they will become smokers. <br />