SHARE

You probably know this already, but on December 12, the City of Fort Worth updated its smoking ordinance, extending its prohibition of cigarettes and e-cigarettes to bars and bingo parlors, limiting smokers’ privilege to light up to the parts of outdoor patios that are 20 feet from a door, private clubs, and cigar bars. The ordinance goes into effect on March 12. I couldn’t be happier.

Well, that’s not totally true. I think the 20 feet rule is kind of unreasonable, and it seems like it was a compromise concocted by someone who doesn’t spend much time in bars, because there are lots of bars that don’t have that kind of outdoor space. But whatever. I’ve been hoping for this smoking ban since I’ve been old enough to go to bars, even more so since I started working and performing in them. If my wallet is lighter for a little while because of diminished business, I’ll deal with it.

Of course, the idea that a smoking ban in bars will harm sales is one of the biggest arguments against extending the ordinance’s reach, and it’s not without merit. Certainly, there are plenty of patrons all over town so calcified in their routine (sit down, light up, order drink) that they will refuse to imbibe where they can’t smoke. That might seem like a lot of potentially empty seats, but in truth, smokers are a minority, and, statistically, that market share is shrinking. In 2016, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that 15.1 percent of adults smoked in the previous year, a number down 1.7 percent from 2014 and almost 10 percent from 1997. In interview with NPR’s Audie Cornish contemporaneous with that study’s release, Dr. Tom Frieden, then-director of the CDC, said, “One thing that’s happening is a whole generation of kids smoked a lot less, and they’re aging in and replacing the young adults who smoked at a very high rate 10 years ago.”

Ridglea-theater-300x250

To extrapolate, those figures say only 15 out of 100 adults smoked in 2016 (like I said, a minority), and as stressful as 2017 was, trends are trends. I suspect that that number has dropped even more over the past year. Then there’s the other implication regarding Frieden’s “whole generation of kids” who smoked a lot less: When those nonsmoking teens are old enough to drink in bars, the number of smokers will be even lower still. So while a smoking ban might make some regulars so indignant that they never darken their favorite bar’s door again, their vacated spots will be claimed by new drinkers with no experience of smoking-permissive bars.

I’m confident that the economics of Fort Worth’s updated smoking ban will take care of itself, because bars stay in business by selling alcohol, and alcohol is the vice both smokers and nonsmokers have in common

But shrinking revenue isn’t the only claim against the ban. Many of its opponents vociferate about government oppression and other libertarian appeals. “I’m an adult, and it’s my body, and it should be the choice of the business whether or not to allow smoking,” goes the argument and with it a corollary: “If bartenders don’t like my smoke, they should go work someone else.” I don’t have the column space or the energy to debate that with facts and logic, so enjoy this emotional retort: While I don’t think smoking cigarettes makes you a bad person, it is undeniably self-interested. Yes, your body is yours to destroy. But what of my body? What if I don’t want to destroy it with cigarettes? When we are both at a bar, you can fill yourself with liquor or beer or wine, but unless you spill a pint on me or puke on my shoes or get drunk and run me over with your car, you cannot physically make me part of your indulgence. However, when the smoke from your cigarettes drifts into my face, clings to my clothes, and fills in my pores, I am forced, against my will, to participate in your destructive habit. 

No offense, truly, but your habit is gross. More than anything, I wish you’d quit it, because while your smoking is bad for my body, it’s even worse for yours. Why not do us both a favor and conquer your compulsion once and for all? Because whether you like it or not, that smoking ban is happening. I still want to serve you drinks. 

3 COMMENTS

  1. I’m sorry, but I respectfully disagree with this article. Smoking bans really have hurt a lot of adult only businesses, to the point where they had to close down. Or ignore the ban, just to keep their doors open. That’s fine that you don’t like smoking, but that I have no doubt that market pressures have been forcing a lot of bars to ban smoking on their own accord, even in non-ban areas. I still very strongly believe that market pressure(and the requests of customers) should be the factor bars owners use to decide whether to ban smoking, not an obnoxious law banning smoking in all bars. I won’t be surprised if a very limited number of Fort Worth bars, choose to quietly ignore this ban once it takes effect. Or even go out of business, as well. The words you state in this article make me think you’re a bartender, so don’t be surprised if you find yourself out of a job as a result. And last I checked, secondhand smoke exposure will not kill you, and is a minor annoyance at worst: https://web.archive.org/web/20101219060452/https://www.acsh.org/publications/pubID.346/pub_detail.asp

    In Northwest Indiana(NWI) where I frequent every so often as I live not too far west of the border in Illinois, there definitely are bars that could allow smoking if they wanted to, but voluntarily do not. I’m fine with that, and I see a growing trend of non-smoking bars in NWI. Still, I like(as an infrequent non-daily social smoker, who has NEVER smoked daily in his life btw) the more fun atmosphere that smoky bars do provide vs. non-smoking bars, so I’m sorry to hear that all but one Fort Worth city council member did vote in favor of a smoking ban law there.

    Also, this site does provide a lot of articles(some which are now archived behind a paywall, or since taken down and no longer can be read due to broken links) about how smoking bans are bad for smoker friendly businesses(and especially look at the ones for Michigan): http://www.davehitt.com/facts/badforbiz/ Also, the Illinois ban really did impact the budgets of cities that were dependent on casino revenue(i.e. Elgin, Aurora, Alton, East Saint Louis to name examples), and caused at least one casino in Metropolis where revenue dropped 23%, and 30 employees were laid off: http://www.aproundtable.org/news.cfm?news_ID=2231&issuecode=casino

    To me that’s fine if you don’t like smoking allowed bars and other businesses where smoking is allowed, but it still isn’t right to take that right away from every last bar and business allowing smoking. I like how Indiana requires the bars that chose to be exempt from their state ban to post an exterior sign that they allow smoking, and I think that’s more than fair IMO.

    My point is, leave those bars that want to allow smoking alone. It always should be the onus on customers to patronize non-smoking bars, or express their preference to a manager or employee that they’d rather have a bar make a move to being non-smoking. If you want your bar to be non-smoking, totally fine with me. But a selfish government imposed ban shouldn’t be forced on every last bar to have to make that move, either!

  2. So. Overserving alcohol is any better? I see this much too often. Shit faced 20 something’s walk into a bar and obviously shouldn’t be served. In my opinion that’s a much larger problem. Please do not use Libertarian in your verbage. That’s idiotic. Come on. Those who smoke, choose to go to places where it’s allowed and do not smoke in places where it is not allowed. Bartenders have MANY places they can work without smoke. Period. Quoting “statistics” is BORING. YOU are not a smoker. So don’t work where you aren’t around smoke? Oh hey. That’s an idea. Also, notice the cigar bar downtown Fort Worth is exempt. Ha. Figures. They sell more booze than cigars but because they are called a cigar bar they are exempt? Money talks. This is probs lt the most biased article I have ever read from this paper. What a shame.

  3. Steve- Thanks for enduring years of 2nd hand smoke cancer-risk to serve me sugar-laden alcohol that is an even worse cancer-risk for my body. I am glad that you can finally work and play in this environment and enjoy it now and most importantly I will never have to read another article about you bitching about smokers. You will have to find a new foil. Maybe sugary alcohols?

LEAVE A REPLY