Tuesday, Jan. 20,2009 9:33 p.m.
Although most of us probably paid no mind to it this past New Year’s
Day, Jan. 1 was the one-year anniversary of the IU smoking ban, a
campus-wide prohibition of smoking on IU property with the exception of
a few designated smoking spots and private property not owned, operated
or leased by the University.
It seemed fairly obvious that smoking on campus at best only marginally
decreased. The punishments violators would be given if caught were not
enforceable (referring them to the Office of the Dean of Students for
review and then action), because it wasted everyone’s time.
The University has therefore formed a committee of students to discuss
ways to make the ban more enforceable. One possibility is changing the
punishment to ticketing violators when apprehended.
We support the ban on the general principle that people ought to be
able to do what they want so long as their actions don’t directly harm
anyone else. We have no problem with smoking – smokers know the health
risks associated with it and can choose to continue smoking if they
want. Instead, what we’re worried about here is that smoking in public
not only harms the smoker, but harms the public as well.