Casinos
May Face Bans on Smoking
One of the key issues the American
Gaming Association will tackle next year will
be fighting initiatives across the country that
would ban smoking in casinos.
The
association's chief executive, Frank Fahrenkopf,
said the industry is "tremendously concerned"
about the proliferation of anti-smoking petitions
and other measures.
Smoking
bans hurt business for casinos because some
gamblers prefer to smoke, Fahrenkopf said.
As
an alternative, the American Gaming Association
is pushing casino members to adopt improved
air filtration systems that can suck up smoke
and blow in fresh air.
The
association is working with the American Society
of Heating, Refrigerating and Air Conditioning
Engineers to create a "best practices"
air filtration standard that casinos can follow,
Fahrenkopf said.
After
the first of the year, the trade group expects
to meet with the heads of several state gaming
associations to discuss a standard that can
be shown to state legislators and residents,
he said.
"The
real battle is not the federal level,"
Fahrenkopf said. "It's going to be at the
state level."
Also
next year, the association is contacting leading
air-conditioning vendors to participate in a
new industry conference called G2E Institute
to be held in May at the upcoming Red Rock Resort
in Las Vegas.
The
vendors will be able to demonstrate to casinos
"the best technique for removing smoke,"
Fahrenkopf said.
Air
filtration systems don't go far enough, antismoking
advocates have argued.
Even
the most advanced filtration systems aren't
equivalent to a smokefree environment and can't
prevent someone from breathing in smoke from
a cigarette a few feet away, they say.
Creating
a virtually smokefree environment inside a casino
"seems a practical and doable thing,"
but more research needs to be done, MGM Mirage
spokesman Alan Feldman said.
"If
you are standing next to someone who's smoking,
I'm not sure there's something specific that
exists to prevent you from inhaling the smoke
just like I'm not sure if there's anything that
can prevent you from inhaling smoke when you
walk outside," Feldman said. "Having
large-scale infiltration systems creates a much
healthier environment for everybody."
A
number of the company's casinos have high-tech
filtration systems, including the Mirage, Bellagio
and Mandalay Bay.
Filtration
technology is constantly improving, Feldman
said. New developments include table games outfitted
with filters that suck up smoke, he said.
In
New Jersey, the industry appears to have escaped
a public smoking ban under consideration by
the state Legislature. The proposed legislation
would exempt casinos in Atlantic City while
prohibiting smoking in other public areas.
The
Casino Association of New Jersey recently funded
a study by PricewaterhouseCoopers concluding
that a smoking ban in Atlantic City casinos
would result in a loss of $93 million in tax
revenue to the state in the first two years
of implementation. The study also projected
a loss of about 3,400 jobs in Atlantic City
and a loss of $175 million in wages within two
years.
Released
last month, the report was based on an analysis
of gaming revenue at Delaware racetrack casinos
before and after a smoking ban in 2002. Gaming
revenue fell 19 percent during the two years
following the ban and 20 percent at Dover Downs,
a major casino in Delaware. That followed six
consecutive years of revenue growth prior to
the smoking ban, the study said.
The
Delaware ban, which applies to public areas
but not private clubs, survived a court challenge
arguing that the prohibition violated the state
constitution's equal protection clause. But
a Superior Court judge in Delaware said the
ban, intended to promote public health, was
constitutional.
Casinos,
bars, convenience stores and other venues with
slot machines are facing down the possibility
of an antismoking ballot initiative next year
in Nevada that would prevent smoking in bars
and taverns that also serve food.
That
initiative, called the Nevada Clean Indoor Air
Act, is backed by various health organizations
including the American Cancer Society.
A
group of taverns, convenience stores and slot
route operators gathered to oppose the petition
drive and have advanced their own initiative
that would maintain smoking in gaming areas.
The industry group also filed suit in District
Court in Carson City in March to block the Clean
Indoor Air Act, arguing that the language was
too vague, among other things. A state judge
is expected to decide by the end of the year
whether to allow or dismiss the injunction.
While
both Nevada petitions exempt casinos, Nevada's
gaming industry has joined the tavern industry
in opposing the Clean Indoor Air Act, saying
the measure would end up prohibiting smoking
in hotel rooms. Backers of the act dispute that
view, and a judge is examining the validity
of those claims. Under state law, hotel rooms
are viewed as private residences.
Buffy
Martin, government relations director for the
American Cancer Society in Nevada, has called
the industry's claim a "junk suit"
and said it is a tactic common in other states
where tobacco companies have fought antismoking
initiatives.
"They'll
sue nonprofit organizations because there's
no way the American Cancer Society can match
the amount of money the tobacco companies have
to fight this," Martin said.
Several
states have enacted smoking bans in recent years,
including Massachusetts, Idaho and Washington.
A number of other states are considering smoking
bans.
Antismoking
petitions and legislation are gaining momentum
nationwide because people have become increasingly
aware of the dangers of second-hand smoke, Martin
said.
"I
think citizens agree that second-hand smoke
is a public health problem," she said.
"It's not just a nuisance anymore."
Some
Las Vegas casinos have certain areas that prohibit
smoking such as individual tables or banks of
slot machines. While the newest properties boast
high-tech filtration systems, many older casinos
don't and are noticeably smoky.
The
lone exception is poker rooms. The majority
of Las Vegas poker rooms have gone smoke-free
because a growing number of poker players prefer
to gamble without breathing in smoke that was
often thicker inside the poker rooms' enclosed
walls.
Antismoking
initiative petitions typically survive court
challenges, Martin said.
"They're
afraid this will go on the ballot because a
majority of Nevadans support this," she
said of the gaming industry's stance against
smoking bans.
Smoking
rates have declined in places with smoking bans,
she said.
"When
people can't smoke indoors, they will start
to reduce their smoking," she said. "And
the health risk to workers goes down."
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