Youtube

Go to The Main Page Add Youtube to favorite!

List of smoking bans in the United States 

The following is a list of smoking bans in the United States.

Article One of the Constitution of the United States does not grant the United States Congress the specific power to regulate smoking or tobacco use. Conceivably, however, Congress could attempt to enact a nationwide smoking ban using, for example, the Commerce Clause by regulating tobacco, including where it is consumed, or the Taxing and Spending Clause, by making a state's access to certain federal funds contingent on the state adopting a statewide smoking ban. Alternatively, Congress could attempt to amend the Constitution to prohibit smoking nationwide (as it did to enact Prohibition in the United States by means of the Eighteenth Amendment in 1919). But no proposal for any of these measures ever has ever been put forth before Congress.

Therefore, smoking bans in the United States are only a product of state and local criminal and occupational safety and health laws. What follows is a list of such state and local laws. 50% of Americans are covered by a 100% smoking ban.[1] For smoking bans and restrictions outside the United States, see the worldwide list of smoking bans.

Contents

Bans in public places or bars/restaurants

 Alabama

  • No statewide smoking ban. A bill to enact a statewide smoking ban failed before the Alabama Legislature in May 2008.[2]
  • Gadsden, Alabama banned smoking in all restaurants within the city limits, effective 5 May 2007
  • Decatur, Alabama banned smoking in businesses, including restaurants and bars, effective 1 October
  • Auburn, Alabama banned smoking in most public buildings, as well as within ten feet of the entrance to any such building, effective October 2006. Smoking is not banned on the Auburn University campus, except indoors; however in 2008 the Student Government Association Senate passed a bill to ban smoking in certain outdoor areas where smoke cannot be avoided. The bill has yet to be signed by university president Jay Gogue as of September 2008.

 Alaska

  • No statewide smoking ban.
  • Anchorage, July 1, 2007, banned in all enclosed workplaces, including bars, restaurants, and private clubs.[3]
  • Juneau, January 2, 2008, banned in all enclosed workplaces, including bars, restaurants, and private clubs.[4]

 Arizona

  • Statewide smoking ban: in November 2006, 54.7% of voters approved the Smoke Free Arizona Act (Proposition 201), banning smoking in all bars, restaurants, and workplaces in Arizona. The ban came into effect on 1 May 2007.[5]

 Arkansas

  • Statewide partial smoking ban: July 21, 2006, banned in almost all workplaces in Arkansas. Exceptions include establishments that do not allow patrons younger than 21; retail tobacco stores; long-term care facilities including nursing homes; gaming floors of operations regulated by the Arkansas Racing Commission; designated hotel smoking rooms; and workplaces with fewer than three employees.

 California

  • Statewide smoking ban: 1994, banned in all workplaces (excepting tobacconists), including all restaurants; in 1998, smoking was banned in bars. Additionally, California prohibits smoking within 20 feet (6.5m) of any door, window or air intake of any government building within the state, including buildings owned or occupied (e.g. leased) by any government entity, including public universities, or public buildings leased to private firms.[6] Additionally, as of 2008, smoking in the presence of a minor (18 years or younger) while in a moving vehicle is a misdemeanor offense. The charge is not strict enough to be pulled over; it only can be cited along with a stricter offense, such as a moving violation or traffic accident.[7]
  • Belmont, October 9, 2007, banned in parks and other public places, as well as inside apartments and condominiums.[8]
  • Beverly Hills, October 1, 2007, banned in all outdoor dining areas[9].
  • Burbank, April, 2007, joined Calabasas and Santa Monica by restricting smoking in most public places including Downtown Burbank, outdoor dining & shopping areas, parks, service lines and within 20 feet of all building entrances/exits. [7]. The Secondhand Smoke Control Ordinance was supported by Mayor Todd Campbell, Jef Vander Borght and Marsha Ramos following independent requests by 2 Burbank residents, Eric Michael Cap & Robert Phipps Esq.[8] and overwhelming community support.
  • Calabasas, 2006, banned in all indoor and outdoor public places, except for a handful of scattered, designated outdoor smoking areas in town. Believed to be the strictest ban in the United States.[10]
  • El Cajon, August 14, 2007, banned on city streets, in outdoor patios in restaurants, and outside of the local shopping mall. Anyone caught smoking in public areas will faces a fine of up to $500. The city previously outlawed smoking in parks, and also requires businesses that sell tobacco products to obtain a city license.
  • Los Angeles, 2007, banned in all city parks.
  • San Luis Obispo, August 2, 1990, became the first city in the world to ban smoking in all public buildings.[11]
  • Santa Monica, 2006, banned smoking within 20 feet of entrances, exits or operable windows of a public building (such as City Hall and the courthouse), in local parks (including parking lots), on the Third Street Promenade, on local beaches and on the Santa Monica Pier (except within designated zones).

 Colorado

  • Statewide smoking ban: on July 1, 2006, the Colorado Clean Indoor Air Act[12] went into effect, making Colorado the 13th state to pass a comprehensive public indoor smoking ban. The law prohibits smoking in nearly all enclosed workplaces and public indoor places, including bars, restaurants, and casinos. The law exempts tobacconists, cigar-tobacco bars, limousines under private hire, up to 25% of hotel rooms, workplaces which are not open to public and which employ fewer than three employees, and private non-residential farm buildings of farms with less than $500,000 in annual gross income. In June 2006, a group of bar owners filed suit in the United States District Court for the District of Colorado and sought an temporary restraining order preventing the Act from taking effect the following month while their lawsuit was pending, but their request was denied.[13]

 Connecticut

  • Statewide smoking ban: the Clean Indoor Air Act,[14], effective April 1, 2004, prohibits smoking in nearly all indoor public places and workplaces, including bars and restaurants. Exemptions include existing private clubs, cigar bars, correctional facilities, smoking areas of psychiatric facilities, public housing projects, up to 25% of hotel rooms, and some businesses with fewer than five employees (not including bars and restaurants).

 Delaware

  • Statewide smoking ban: November, 2002 banned in all public buildings, including workplaces, bars, restaurants, and casinos.

 District of Columbia

  • January, 2007, banned in bars, restaurants and other public places. Exempts outdoor areas, hotel rooms, retail tobacco outlets, cigar bars, hookah bars, and business which can show that they receive 10% or more of their annual revenue from tobacco sales, excluding cigarette machines.[15]

 Florida

  • Statewide partial smoking ban: July 1, 2003, banned in all enclosed workplaces; exempts private homes, tobacco shops, designated rooms at motels and hotels, and stand alone bars with no more than 10% of revenue from food sales.
  • Sarasota County: Ban on smoking at beaches unless in designated areas of beach.

Georgia

  • Statewide partial smoking ban:July 1, 2005, banned in restaurants and bars which allow minors under 18 to enter, or which employ minors.
  • Athens-Clarke County, 2005, banned in all enclosed workplaces, including restaurants and bars.
  • Morrow, September 21, 2006, banned in all enclosed workplaces, including restaurants and bars.

 Hawaii

  • Statewide smoking ban: November 16, 2006, banned in all enclosed or partially enclosed workplaces. This in includes all restaurants and bars including all outdoor seating areas. Persons caught smoking in a restricted area which includes anywhere a patron can be served and within 20 feet (6 meters) of doors and windows will face a $50 fine. In addition the person will be assigned a future court date which they must attend or have a warrant issued for their arrest. [16]
  • Hawaii County, March 13, 2008, banned in public recreational areas, such as parks and beaches.

 Idaho

  • Statewide partial smoking ban: July, 2004, banned in restaurants, retail stores, sports venues, child care centers, schools, hospitals, and bowling alleys. Exempts bars and private clubs.

 Illinois

  • Statewide smoking ban: on January 1, 2008, the Smoke Free Illinois Act became effective. The act bans smoking in virtually all enclosed workplaces statewide, including bars, restaurants, and casinos, subject to a few, narrow exemptions. The act supersedes all local bans which are less restrictive, but permits local governments to enact more restrictive smoking bans.[17]

 Indiana

  • No statewide smoking ban.
  • Allen County, 2007 banned in all places, except for bars, and any establishments prohibiting minors under 21 from entering. Similar to the Cook County smoking ban, municipalities are allowed to opt out of it, as New Haven decided to do.
  • Avon, September 1, 2006, banned in all public places except bars.
  • Bloomington, January 1, 2005 banned in public buildings including outdoor dining areas. Smoking is allowed only outside at a "reasonable distance" from doors, vents, and windows - measured by whether smoke can drift inside. Also banned in bars and private clubs as of 2005. From January 1, 2008 also banned on the campus of Indiana University, including all outdoor areas.
  • Carmel, March 5, 2006 banned in all workplaces, enclosed areas and common-use areas (i.e. restrooms, lobbies, etc.), nursing homes and retirement facilities, condos, and restaurants. Exempts bars that don't employ or serve people under 21, tobacco stores and bars, private vehicles, private and fraternal clubs, and hotel/motel rooms, providing that 20% or fewer rooms are designated for smoking.
  • Clarksville, December 11, 2007, rejected ban on smoking in all places open to the public[18]
  • Columbus, February 1, 2006, banned in all public places, except bars and private clubs.
  • Crown Point, April 1, 2008, banned in all places, except bars and private clubs.
  • Delaware County Banned in restaurants and as of March 17, 2008, Ball State University is a smoke-free campus.
  • Evansville, January 2, 2007 banned in most public places, except in establishments with physically separated smoking rooms prohibiting minors under 18.
  • Fort Wayne, banned in January 1999 in all restaurants, except in separate, fully enclosed area(s) within a restaurant with a ventilation system. Exempted bars and bowling alleys. Effective June 1, 2007, Fort Wayne's ban expanded to include all restaurants, bars, and private clubs. The new ban exempts retail tobacco stores and hotel rooms that are specifically designated for smoking. [9]
  • Franklin, August 1, 2006 banned in all public places, except bars and private clubs.
  • Goshen, September 1, 2007 banned in all places, except bars and private clubs.
  • Greencastle, September 1, 2007, banned in all businesses, including restaurants and bars.
  • Greenfield, March 1, 2006 banned in all public places, but exempts bars.
  • Greenwood, April 22, 2006 banned in all places, except bars.
  • Indianapolis, March 1, 2006 banned in all workplaces, day-care facilities, sports arenas, and restaurants and bars serving or employing minors younger than 18. Exempts bowling alleys, tobacco bars, tobacco stores, and private clubs.
  • Jeffersonville, June 15, 2006 banned in almost all public places, including restaurants. Exempts bars and private clubs.
  • Kokomo, October 6, 2006 banned in all public places and workplaces, except bars, private clubs, nursing homes, and any establishments serving alcohol and not serving patrons under 21.
  • Lafayette, September 1, 2008 banned in all enclosed public places except hotel rooms designated for smokers, tobacco shops, private clubs, and places that employ and serve only people 21 and older during all business hours.
  • Lawrence, July 1, 2006 banned in all places except bars.
  • Ligonier, November 2007 rejected ban on smoking in all buildings open to the public[19]
  • Madison,
  • Morgan County, January 1, 2005 banned in all restaurants, except ones that have separate smoking rooms.
  • Muncie, July 15, 2006 banned smoking in restaurants and bowling alleys, except those with attached bars that were closed off from the rest of the building. Exceptions were also made for bars and taverns.
  • New Haven, rejected ban; instead, passed similar law to those in place in St. Louis County, Missouri and Lake St. Louis, Missouri, requiring businesses permitting smoking to post exterior signage stating their smoking policy.
  • Plainfield, February 1, 2007 banned in workplaces, restaurants, and bars. Exempts private clubs and nursing homes.
  • Seymour, July 30, 2006 banned in public places except bars and private clubs.
  • Shelbyville, August 1, 2006 banned in all public places, but exempts bars.
  • Speedway, September 1, 2006 banned in all indoor public places except bars.
  • Valparaiso, April 1, 2007, banned in all places, except bars and private clubs.
  • Vanderburgh County
  • West Lafayette, July 1, 2007 banned in all workplaces except homes, some hotel rooms, retail tobacco stores, tobacco bars, private clubs and outdoor areas in the city, including Purdue University's main campus.
  • Zionsville, August 10, 2006 banned in all indoor public places, including workplaces, restaurants, bars. Also banned in private clubs, like Bloomington's ban.

 Iowa

  • Statewide smoking ban: July 1, 2008, after Governor Culver signed H.F. 2212, the Smoke Free Air Act, smoking is banned in all restaurants and bars (except outdoor seating areas of bars)[20], in virtually all enclosed workplaces statewide, the indoor and outdoor grounds of both public and private schools, and most State Government (and its subsidiaries) owned or leased property, including most State, County, and City Parks[21]. The act exempts the gaming floor of state licensed casinos, the state run veterans home in Marshalltown, and designated areas of state penitenteries.[22][23]
  • Violations: Fines for individuals found in violation of the Smoke Free Air Act are currently set at US$50 per violation,[24] Fines for businesses range anywhere from US$100 to US$500[24] for each violation with the eventual possibility of revocation of liquor and/or business license for habitually offending businesses.[25]

 Kansas

  • No statewide smoking ban. The Kansas Legislature twice has rejected a statewide smoking ban, once in January 2007 and again in August 2007.[26] A third attempt failed when it was not passed by the end of the legislative year in May 2008.[27] In 2007, upon a bar owner's challenge to Lawrence's smoking ban, the Kansas Supreme Court ruled that cities and counties may enact smoking bans which are more stringent than state law.[28]
  • Abilene, August 29, 2005, banned in all workplaces, except bars and bowling alleys.
  • Derby, January 1, 2009, banned in all workplaces; exempts restaurants and bars unless Wichita passes a smoking ban affecting such establishments.
  • Fairway, January 1, 2006, banned in all public places.
  • Garden City, January 8, 2007, banned in all restaurants and bars, and private clubs. Exempts private offices.
  • Harvey County, January 1, 2008, banned in all workplaces, including restaurants and bars in unincorporated areas of Harvey County, and within 20 feet (6.1 m) of the entrances to those places.[29]
  • Unincorporated areas of Johnson County, April 1, 2007, banned in all enclosed workplaces[30]
  • Lawrence, July 1, 2004, began a ban on smoking in "all enclosed public places" within the city.
  • Leawood, January 2, 2008, was the 2nd Kansas City area municipality to agree to the KRHA model smoking ban ordinance, similar to the ban passed in Overland Park. It bans smoking in all places, except for outdoor patio areas of restaurants.
  • Mission, September 1, 2008, banned in all enclosed workplaces, including bars and restaurants; also banned within 20 feet of entrances and windows of such facilities[31]
  • Mission Hills, May 2007, rejected smoking ban[32]
  • Newton, January 1, 2008, banned in the indoor areas of all public workplaces, including restaurants and bars, and within 20 feet (6.1 m) of the entrances to those places[33]
  • North Newton, January 1, 2008, banned in the indoor areas of all public workplaces, including restaurants and bars, and within 20 feet (6.1 m) of the entrances to those places[34]
  • Olathe, November 16, 2006 banned in all public places, including restaurants, bars, and workplaces. Private clubs and fraternal clubs exempt.
  • Ottawa, June 1, 2008 scheduled to be banned in restaurants. Bars, fraternal and private clubs exempt. Presented to Ottawa City Commission by Youth in Government in July 2007.
  • Overland Park, January 2, 2008, banned in all workplaces, including restaurants and bars, private clubs, and bowling alleys. Exempts outdoor patio areas of restaurants.[35]
  • Prairie Village, January 2, 2008, banned in all workplaces; exempts bars and restaurants are unless all neighboring cities pass bans (not currently met, because Kansas City, Missouri, Mission and Mission Hills do not have bans affecting restaurants and bars in effect).
  • Roeland Park, May 17, 2006, banned in all workplaces, including bars and restaurants.
  • Salina, 2002, banned in all restaurants between 5am and 9pm. Ban only applies to restaurants.
  • Sedgwick, November 20, 2007, rejected ban on smoking in bars and restaurants by unanimous decision of the city council[36]
  • Scott City, January 2004, rejected ban on smoking in bars and restaurants[37]
  • Shawnee, January 2, 2008, banned in all workplaces including restaurants and private clubs, but exempting 25% of hotel rooms and any bars which derive less than 33% of their gross annual revenues from food sales.
  • Westwood, February 1, 2008, banned in the indoor areas of all public workplaces, including restaurants and bars, and within 25 feet (7.6 m) of the entrances to those places.[38]
  • Wichita, December 17, 2007, rejected ban on smoking in all enclosed workplaces, including bars and restaurants.[39]

 Kentucky

  • No commonwealthwide smoking ban. In 2004, the Kentucky Supreme Court ruled that cities and counties may enact smoking bans which are more stringent than state law.[40]
  • Ashland, October 1, 2006 Prohibits smoking in all enclosed public places and places of employment, as well as outdoor arenas, venues and outdoor patio areas of restaurants and bars.
  • Daviess County, January 1, 2006 banned in any public establishment open to children under 18. Exempts private businesses and bars.
  • Danville, Kentucky, July 28, 2008 banned in all workplaces and within ten feet of the entrance of any workplace, including restaurants, public buildings and bars
  • Frankfort, July 25, 2006 banned in all businesses, including public buildings, restaurants, and bars.
  • Georgetown, October 1, 2005 banned in most public buildings. Smoking is still allowed in some hotel rooms.
  • Letcher County, took effect July 1, 2006 in all public buildings and restaurants. Exempts private clubs, private buildings.
  • Lexington, April 27, 2004 banned in public buildings.
  • Louisville, January 11, 2008, banned in all enclosed workplaces, except when an establishment obtains permission from the city otherwise.[41] Previously, a smoking ban which exempted Churchill Downs (site of the Kentucky Derby) was struck down by a state court on Dec 21, 2007, as violating the Kentucky Constitution's prohibition of special legislation.[42]
  • Madison County, June 12, 2007 banned in all workplaces, restaurants, and bars, including all businesses in the cities of Richmond and Berea. Exempts outdoor patio areas of restaurants and bars (bars are only allowed in the city of Richmond, since the rest of the county is dry).
  • Paducah, April 1, 2007 banned in all workplaces, bars, and restaurants.
  • Paintsville, 2006 banned in all workplaces. (Bars are not mentioned in the ordinance, but Paintsville is located in a dry county.)

 Louisiana

  • Statewide partial smoking ban: January 1, 2007, per SB 742, banned in all workplaces, restaurants, and other indoor public venues. Exempts bars whose majority sales involve alcohol, tobacco shops, and casinos. [43]
  • Mandeville, June 10, 2005 banned in public places, workplaces, virtually all areas of public parks, and restaurants without a liquor license. Exempts bars and any restaurants with a liquor license.
  • Shreveport, May 10, 2005 banned in public buildings, city parks, public areas, restaurants, and shopping malls and retail stores. Exempts bars and any businesses that sell alcohol.
  • Terrebonne Parish, January 12, 2006 banned in shopping centers and malls, adult, child-care, and health-care facilities, parish buildings, sports arenas, museums, retail stores, restaurants without a liquor license, and bus stops. Exempts restaurants and bars with liquor licenses.

 Maine

  • Statewide smoking ban: January 1, 2004, banned in bars. Smoking has been banned in restaurants since September 1999. The "Workplace Smoking Act of 1985" prohibits smoking in workplaces which are not open to the public.[44] As of September 1, 2008, smoking is banned in any car with a child under the age of 16.[45]

 Maryland

  • Statewide smoking ban: after Governor Martin O'Malley signed the Clean Indoor Air Act of 2007 into law on May 17, 2007,[46][47], effective February 1, 2008, smoking is banned in all enclosed workplaces, including fraternal clubs, all restaurants, and all bars. Exempt from the law are private homes and residences, no more than 25% of hotel rooms, retail tobacconists, tobacco manufacturers, importers, wholesalers, or distributors, and laboratories researching the health effects of tobacco smoke. The Act allows businesses to apply for waivers to the law, however all waivers will expire on January 1, 2011.[48]
  • Baltimore - City Council passed ban for bars and restaurants on February 26, 2007. The ban was originally supposed to go into effect on January 1, 2008, but the date was changed to February 1, 2008 to coincide with the new statewide ban.[49]
  • Charles County - banned in restaurants but not standalone bars since June 2006.[50] Its county seat, La Plata, has since passed an expanded ordinance going beyond the county's ban, extending the ban to town bars, in addition to restaurants.citation needed
  • Howard County - passed smoking ban on June 5, 2006. The ban went into effect on June 1, 2007. Smoking is banned in all restaurants and bars.[51]
  • Montgomery County, July 1, 2003 - banned in all eating and drinking establishments. Exempts private and fraternal clubs that hold liquor licenses.[52]
  • Prince George's County, December 23, 2005 - banned in all bars and restaurants. Private clubs are exempt.citation needed
  • Talbot County, April 2004 banned in all bars and restaurants. Exempts fraternal clubs.citation needed

 Massachusetts

  • Commonwealthwide smoking ban: July 2004 banned in all workplaces, including restaurants and bars. Massachusetts' ban exempts private clubs, and cigar bars.
  • Freetown, Massachusetts, January 1, 2004 banned in all businesses, including private clubs

 Michigan

  • No statewide smoking ban. In 2001, the Michigan Court of Appeals held that Michigan state law preempts local jurisdictions from enacting a complete ban on smoking in bars and restaurants.[53] In so holding, the Court invalidated Marquette's restaurant smoking ban. In June of 2008, a proposed statewide smoking ban failed when the Michigan Legislature adjourned for the summer without deciding it, after having spent several weeks bouncing differing versions between the Michigan Senate and the Michigan House of Representatives.[54]
  • Grand Rapids, November 1, 2006, banned in all enclosed workplaces, excluding bars and restaurants; also banned within 10 feet from a public building.[55]
  • Washtenaw County, banned in all restaurants that make less than 65% of sales from food, excluding restaurants with bars in them. Banned in apartment building hallways in Ypsilanti, Ann Arbor, and Pittsfield Townsip. banned in dormitories at Eastern Michigan University and the University of Michigan.
  • Wayne County, June 15, 2007, banned in all enclosed indoor workplaces, except restaurants, bars, bingo halls, or "designated smoking rooms" with air-control systems.[56]

 Minnesota

  • Statewide smoking ban: 1 October 2007, smoking is prohibited in all indoor and in-home workplaces including restaurants, bars, public transportation through the Freedom to Breathe Act of 2007 [10]. This ban enhanced the original Minnesota Clean Indoor Air Act of 1975 [11], which banned smoking in workplaces not frequented by the general public. The ban does not prohibit smoking outdoors, regardless of the distance from indoor areas. This ban supersedes all weaker local bans; however, counties and cities are allowed to enforce more stringent rules. Examples follow:
    • Beltrami County: Smoking is prohibited within 10 feet (3.0 m) of the entrances to restaurants and bars. Effective date January 1, 2005.
    • Bloomington: Smoking is prohibited within 25 feet (7.6 m) of entrances and in 50% of outdoor eating areas of restaurants. Effective date July 19, 2004.
    • Carlton County: Smoking is banned on 50% of outdoor patio seating in restaurants and bars. Effective date June 1, 2007
    • Cloquet: Smoking is prohibited within five feet of the entrances to restaurants and bars. Effective date September 7, 2001.
    • Golden Valley: Smoking is prohibited within 25 feet (7.6 m) of entrances, exits, and ventilation openings of all areas of restaurants and bars; public parks; and recreational facilities. Effective date March 31, 2005.
    • McLeod County: Smoking is prohibited within 10 feet (3.0 m) of the entrances to restaurants and bars. Effective date August 1, 2006.

 Mississippi

  • No statewide smoking ban.
  • Gulfport, May 1, 2008. [12]
  • Grenada, May, 2008.
  • Corinth, November 2007 Board of Aldermen adopted a public smoking ban that encompasses city-owned facilities, enclosed public places, employment places and some outdoor areas.[57]
  • Greenville, banned in all indoor public places, including restaurants and bars
  • Greenwood, August 23, 2007 banned in all workplaces, restaurants, and bars.
  • Hattiesburg, January 1, 2007 banned in all indoor public places, including bars, restaurants, and city buildings.
  • Lucedale, December, 2007, rejected a ban on smoking in all enclosed workplaces[58]
  • Oxford, banned in all indoor public places, including bars, restaurants, and city buildings. Smoking is also prohibited in certain outdoor areas.
  • Ridgeland, July 20, 2007 banned in all workplaces, restaurants, and bars.
  • Starkville, May 20, 2006 banned in all indoor public places, including bars, restaurants, and city buildings. Smoking is also prohibited in certain outdoor areas.
  • Tupelo, October 2006 banned in all indoor public places, including restaurants and bars.

 Missouri

  • No statewide smoking ban.
    • Only one proposal for a statewide smoking ban ever has been proposed before the Missouri General Assembly (S.B. 1079 in February 2008), but it had no cosponsors and little support, and failed without even receiving a hearing[59][60][61].
    • Most state officers, both Republican and Democrat, including Governor Matt Blunt, believe that the issue should be decided by cities and counties, not by the state.[62] Only 20% of Missourians support a statewide ban on smoking in all public places.[63] As of November, 2007, Missouri has the second-lowest cigarette excise taxes in the United States (behind only South Carolina) at 17 cents per pack,[64][65] and the electorate voted in 2002 and 2006 to keep it that way.[66] In 2007, Forbes named Missouri's largest metropolitan area, St. Louis, America's "best city for smokers."[64] Missouri also has one of the most permissive approaches to alcohol in the United States (see Alcohol laws of Missouri).
    • Missouri state law says bars and restaurants that seat less than 50 people, bowling alleys, billiard parlors, retail tobacco shops, rooms and halls used for private social functions, limousines and taxicabs where the driver and all passengers agree to smoking, stage performances including smoking, and indoor sports stadiums seating more than 15,000 people "are not considered public places" for the purposes of indoor smoking regulation.[67] Although many Missouri cities have enacted smoking restrictions, as of August, 2008, only nine cities in Missouri have enacted bans on smoking within all bars, restaurants, and similar places. This is mostly because few cities are willing to try prohibiting smoking in the places permitted by state law and risk a lawsuit, as has happened in Kansas City, the largest city in the state to enact a comprehensive ban.[68]
  • Localities which have some form of smoking ban in effect; the nine cities which have enacted bans on smoking in all bars and restaurants are highlighed in bold.
    • Arnold, November 1, 2004, banned in all restaurants seating 50 people or more, except in separately-ventilated smoking rooms; does not touch bars or other enclosed places of employment[69]
    • Ballwin, January 2, 2006, banned in all public places, including workplaces, bars, and restaurants.[70]
    • Blue Springs, May 1, 2008, banned in all restaurants, public buildings, city-owned buildings and most workplaces; exempts bars, bowling alleys, billiard parlors, and retail tobacco shops.[71]
    • Chillicothe, January 1, 2008, banned in all workplaces, including bars and restaurants.[72]
    • Columbia, January 9, 2007, banned in all workplaces, including bars and restaurants.[73]
    • Independence, March 17, 2007, banned in all workplaces, including bars and restaurants, per referendum in November 2006,[74] but basically has gone unenforced since a decision by a lower state court in December 2007 dismissing charges against a bar owner.[75][76]
    • Kansas City, June 7, 2008, banned in all indoor workplaces, except casinos,[77] but halted by a state court on June 4, 2008, after businesses sued Kansas City on the grounds that state law permitted them to allow smoking;[78] and then reinstated by the court on June 21, 2008, while the lawsuit is pending.[68]
    • Kirksville, July 1, 2007, banned in all workplaces, including bars and restaurants.[79]
    • Lee's Summit, December 8, 2006 banned in all workplaces, including bars and restaurants. The original ban, which was passed in August 2006, exempted restaurants with ventilated smoking areas and bars that had very limited food sales, but, as in Independence, voters chose to close those exemptions in November 2006.[80]
    • Maryville, June, 2003, banned in restaurants; exempts all bars, exempts restaurants that receive 50% or more of their gross revenues from alcohol.[81]
    • Nixa, June 8, 2007, banned in all workplaces, including bars and restaurants.[82]
    • North Kansas City, July 10, 2008, banned in all indoor workplaces, except casinos[83]
    • Raymore, August 22, 2008, banned in all public places and within 100 feet of the entrance to public places (except on outdoor patios), but exempts bars, restaurants which have bars, private clubs, stage performances, restaurants which seat fewer than 50 people, bowling alleys, billiard parlors, taxicabs and limousines where both driver and passengers agree to allow smoking, and retail tobacco shops.
    • Springfield, July, 2003, banned in all workplaces, including most restaurants; exempts bowling alleys, restaurants with a capacity lower than 50, restaurants with alcohol sales exceeding $200,000 per year, restaurants with more than 50% proceeds from alcohol sales, bars, and retail tobacco shops.[84]
  • Localities in which a smoking ban was rejected in some manner
    • Farmington, October, 2007, mayor vetoed a ban on smoking in restaurants;[85] and a ban on smoking in all workplaces was rejected in January 2008[86]
    • Jefferson City, December, 2003, mayor vetoed a ban on smoking in restaurants[87]
    • Kirkwood, November 7, 2006, voters rejected by 55% against to 45% for a ban on smoking in all workplaces, including restaurants and bars[88]
    • Lake Saint Louis, January 1, 2008, rejected a ban on smoking in enclosed workplaces; instead, required businesses which allow smoking to post exterior signage stating their smoking policy, which either may be "No Smoking Permitted", "Restricted Smoking Area Available", or "Smoking Permitted"; if a business states that a "restricted smoking area is provided," that area must be separately ventilated with no intrusion of smoke into the non-smoking area.[89]
    • Smithville, December 18, 2007, rejected a ban on smoking in all workplaces, including restaurants and bars[90]
    • St. Louis County, August, 2006, rejected a ban on smoking in bars, restaurants, and casinos; instead, required businesses which allow smoking to post exterior signage stating their smoking policy.[91]

 Montana

  • Statewide smoking ban: 1 October 2005, banned in all public buildings, including workplaces and restaurants. Bars, casinos, night clubs, and cocktail lounges that get 60% or more of their income from alcohol or gambling are exempt from the ban until October 1, 2009. In 2004, the Montana Supreme Court ruled that cities and counties may enact smoking bans which are more stringent than state law.[92]

 Nebraska

 Nevada

  • Statewide partial smoking ban: on November 7, 2006 Nevada voters enacted the Nevada Clean Indoor Air Act[13] (Question 5), codified at NRS 202.2483 et seq. Question 5 received over 54 percent of the vote and became law on December 8, 2006. The Act states that smoking tobacco in any form is prohibited within indoor places of employment including: public and private school buildings and on public and private school grounds; child care facilities with five or more children; all areas of grocery stores, convenience stores and drug stores; all indoor areas within restaurants, including those in casinos or gaming establishments; bars, taverns and saloons that serve food; shopping malls and retail establishments; video arcades; government buildings and public places; and movie theaters. The Act states that smoking is permitted in: areas within casinos where loitering by minors is already prohibited by state law per NRS 463.350; stand-alone bars, taverns and saloons that do not serve food; strip clubs and brothels; retail tobacco stores; and private residences, including private residences that may serve as an office workplace, except if used as a child care, adult day care or health care facility.

 New Hampshire

  • Statewide partial smoking ban: Governor John Lynch signed a bill banning smoking in restaurants, bars, and in cigar bars, on June 19, 2007. The law came into effect September 17, 2007. It exempts bars located within private clubs; it also exempts halls owned by social or religious organizations.

 New Jersey

  • Statewide smoking ban: April 15, 2006, banned in bars, restaurants, bowling alleys, etc. Exceptions in NJ: cigar lounges, tobacco retailers, and on the gaming floors in Atlantic City casinos (a compromised smoking ban on casino floors went into effect on April 15, 2007).

 New Mexico

  • Statewide smoking ban: the Dee Johnson Clean Indoor Air Act[14], effective June 15, 2007, prohibits smoking in virtually all indoor workplaces and indoor public places, as well as the entrances to those buildings. The law exempts casinos, bingo halls, non-profit private clubs, cigar bars, private residences not used for child care or adult health care, tobacco stores and manufacturers, limousines for private hire, up to 25% of hotel rooms, enclosed areas in bars and restaurants used for private functions and sole-proprietor businesses with fewer than two employees. The law also prohibits smoking near the entrances, windows and ventilation systems. Employers will be required to adopt, implement and post a written smoking policy. Penalties are $100 for a first violation, $200 for a second violation within 12 months and $500 for the third and subsequent violations.

 New York

  • Sullivan Ordinance, New York City, January 21, 1908, banned women from smoking in public places (was vetoed by the Mayor after two weeks).
  • Statewide smoking ban: July, 2003, banned in all workplaces, bars, restaurants, bowling alleys, pool halls, and company cars, except Indian casinos and cigar bars.
  • New York City, March 30, 2003, banned smoking in all restaurants, food-service establishments, and bars, with very narrow exceptions.

 North Carolina

  • No statewide smoking ban. A state law passed in 1993 expressly prohibits any smoking restrictions to be passed by any form of local government (counties, cities, towns, etc.).[96] The law is written with a caveat which allows local governments to enact smoking restrictions within: buildings owned/leased/occupied by local government, public meetings, the indoor space in an auditorium/arena/coliseum, libraries or museums open to the public, and any place on a public transportation vehicle owned or leased by local government and used by the public. The North Carolina House of Representatives rejected a statewide smoking ban in May 2007.[97]
  • UNC Public University System. 100 feet from any school building, January 2008.[98]

 North Dakota

  • Statewide partial smoking ban: the North Dakota Legislative Assembly enacted a statewide ban on smoking in public places and places of employment, which exempts both stand-alone bars and restaurants which have bars with separate, enclosed smoking areas, effective August 1, 2005.[99] The Legislative Assembly rejected ending these exemptions in February 2007.[100]
  • Fargo, June 2008, A smoking ban was approved for all indoor public places including bars.
    • North Dakota State University in Fargo, 2008, Outdoor smoking on campus was banned within 50ft of buildings, effectively banning all smoking on the main campus.

 Ohio

  • Statewide smoking ban: on November 7, 2006 Ohio voters approved Chapter 3794 of the Ohio Revised Code (AKA Smoke Free Ohio and Issue 5), which bans smoking in all restaurants, bars, and workplaces with very few exceptions. As this ban is a state law, it superseded any local or county smoking ban previously in force when it came into effect on December 7, 2006. The law gave the power of enforcement to the Ohio Department of Health. On May 3, 2007, the Ohio Department of Health began enforcement of the law.[15] A business may be fined up to $2,500 and individuals $100 if they violate the ban. All places of employment or public places must prohibit all smoking indoors and post legible no smoking signs that contain a number for reporting violations at all entrances. Also all public places must remove all ashtrays and other smoking receptacles.
  • North Royalton on April 16, 2008, legislation was approved by voters prohibiting smoking in parks, fields, and parking lots in the city. City sidewalks were exempt and the mayor may designate smoking areas at his discretion.

 Oklahoma

  • Statewide partial smoking ban. Oklahoma state law expressly preempts any local jurisdiction from enacting a smoking ban.[101]. As a result, the only smoking regulations are at the state level. Smoking is illegal inside and within 25 ft (7.6 m) of all State-owned buildings, including courthouses, municipal buildings and public education facilities. Smoking is banned in any indoor workplace - including restaurants and hotels - unless a separate ventilation system under negative pressure is installed for ventilating the smoking area. Some exceptions are built into the statute. Bars and private clubs are one of the such exemptions in Oklahoma's ban.[102]

 Oregon

  • Statewide smoking ban: on June 26, 2007, Gov. Kulongoski signed the Clean Air Act (SB571), which will ban smoking in all enclosed public places, including bars, taverns, and restaurants. Exempt from the ban are tobacconists, cigar bars, and up to 25% of hotel rooms. The law takes effect on January 1, 2009.[103] In 2000, the Oregon Court of Appeals ruled that cities and counties may enact smoking bans which are more stringent than state law.[104]
  • Corvallis, August 1997 banned in all businesses and public buildings, including within 3 meters (10 ft) of entrances.
  • Eugene, July 2001 banned in all public areas, including bars, restaurants, and venues. [16]
  • Multnomah County, July 1, 2000 banned in workplaces, except bars, truck stops, and private residences. [17]
  • Philomath, banned in all workplaces, restaurants, and bars.

 Pennsylvania

  • Commonwealth wide partial smoking ban. On June 13, 2008, Governor Ed Rendell signed into law a bill passed by the Pennsylvania General Assembly which bans smoking in all enclosed workplaces, with few exceptions, including restaurants and bowling alleys. The law took effect on September 11, 2008, ninety days after being signed. The new law exempts taverns and bars where food accounts for less than 20% of sales and alcohol accounts for more than 80% of sales, established private clubs where the officers vote to allow it, and on 25% of gambling floor space at casinos; the bill passed also would not allow for more stringent regulation by county and municipal governments. Only Philadelphia's Clean Indoor Air Worker Protection Law is exempt from this restriction.[105][106][107]
  • Philadelphia, January 8, 2007, a ban on smoking in almost all workplaces, including in all restaurants and bowling alleys. This ban exempts taverns where food accounts for less than 10% of sales and alcohol accounts for more than 90% of sales. [108]

 Puerto Rico

  • Commonwealthwide smoking ban in almost every indoor location as of March 2, 2007[18]

 Rhode Island

  • Statewide smoking ban: 1 March 2005 banned in almost all indoor workplaces, except some gambling facilities.

 South Carolina

 South Dakota

  • Statewide partial smoking ban: 2002, banned in all office workplaces, and restaurants that don't have a liquor license. Smoking also banned in all government buildings, per an executive order by Governor Mike Rounds in 2006. Gambling and casino facilities, bars, and any restaurant that has a liquor license are exempt from the ban.