Nevada Smoking Ban a Sign of the Times for Changing State
Nevada’s passage of a ballot measure that will chase smokers out of slot machine sections at supermarkets, gas stations and convenience stores, and from bars that serve food is part of an evolution from a frontier state in which anything goes into an urbanized society, analysts say.
Eric Herzik, a political science professor at the University of Nevada, Reno., also offered a simple explanation for this week’s surprising victory for strict regulations on smoking.
“People just don’t like it anymore,” he said
“When you’re this frontier state of 200,000 people, that live-and-let-live-attitude - no problem,” Herzik said.
But Nevada is no longer the Wild West.
“It’s a far more urban and thus regulated environment, and smoking is part of that,” Herzik said.
In a state where the flow of booze is perpetual, gambling fuels the economic engine and undertones of sex are flaunted, the outcome of Tuesday’s election caught many by surprise. Organizers didn’t target smokers in casinos, but they did impose government regulations in a state that prides itself on independence.
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“Nevada has had a libertarian reputation, and has tried to uphold it, but that has been slipping away for quite a while,” said Michael Green, a history professor at the Community College of Southern Nevada.
“While we encourage people to come here and do things that are bad for them, we also have a growing baby boomer population,” Green said. “And that population is probably a bit more health conscious and might not want to be exposed to secondhand smoke.”
The state, now with a population of about 2.5 million, has the nation’s highest rate of smoking-related deaths and one of the lowest rates of smoke-free work places, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
But Nevada also has a unique, almost-anything-goes economic relationship with tourists, and smoking has been regarded as what you do with your other hand while gambling.
Geno Hill, who owns five Rum Runner bars offering food and slots in Las Vegas and who is the president of the Nevada Tavern Owners Association, said he thought the independent leanings of Nevada’s rural counties would snuff Question 5.
“We were pretty comfortable the rural counties wouldn’t let California come in here any more than they are,” Hill said. “By golly, they did.”
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Hill’s organization backed Question 4, a competing, less restrictive anti-smoking measure, which voters rejected, 52 percent to 48 percent.
Instead voters in Nevada’s most populated counties - Clark, Washoe, Douglas, and Carson City - as well as rural Churchill and Lincoln counties, approved Question 5. The remaining 11 rural counties turned it down.
Herzik was among many who projected Nevada voters would favor the less-restrictive measure, but he said he realizes his oversight.
“First and foremost, this was just straight anti-smoking,” Herzik said. “The majority of people do not smoke, the majority of people do not like smoking.”
Green said voters may have been confused between the competing measures, and he offered another theory.
“Nevadans are contrary cusses,” he said.
“There were a lot of advertisements saying vote yes on 4, vote no on 5,” he said, speculating many people voted just the opposite - just because.
Source: AP
