Current:Home > StocksFuming over setback to casino smoking ban, workers light up in New Jersey Statehouse meeting -WealthFlow Academy
Fuming over setback to casino smoking ban, workers light up in New Jersey Statehouse meeting
View
Date:2025-04-25 06:39:23
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — With prospects for a smoking ban in Atlantic City’s casinos looking hazier than ever, workers who want smoking banned took matters into their own hands, lips and lungs Thursday.
Members of the United Auto Workers union disrupted a meeting of a state Assembly committee that had been scheduled to take a preliminary vote on a bill to ban smoking in the casinos by lighting cigarettes and blowing smoke toward legislators.
That vote was canceled Wednesday night when one of the main champions of workers who want smoking banned in the gambling halls gave up on a bill that would end smoking in the nine casinos, and embraced some measures the casino industry wants, including enclosed smoking rooms.
That had some employees burning mad — literally.
Seven members of the union, which represents dealers at three casinos in Atlantic City, began smoking in the meeting hall of the State House Annex, where, like virtually all other workplaces in New Jersey, smoking is prohibited.
“We’re not allowed to smoke in your workplace, but you’re allowed to smoke in ours,” Daniel Vicente, a regional director of the union, told lawmakers through a cloud of exhaled smoke.
He and the others were soon escorted from the hearing room by State Police, and released without charges.
“They say it’s OK for secondhand smoke to be blown in our faces all day, every day,” Vicente said afterward. “We wanted to know if it’s OK if we did that in their workplace. They said it was inappropriate and not allowed here.”
Angry workers said they want the state’s top Democratic leadership to force a vote on the original bill that would impose a total smoking ban, but the likelihood of such a vote remains unclear.
State Sen. Vince Polistina, a Republican from the Atlantic City area who has appeared with casino workers at rallies in favor of a smoking ban, said the original bill is going nowhere.
He said he’s writing a new measure incorporating proposals favored by the casino industry while still working toward the goal of keeping secondhand smoke away from workers and customers who don’t want it.
“My conversations with leaders in both houses make it clear that there is not enough support for this bill,” he said, referring to the original measure that would ban smoking without exceptions. “It is disappointing that after two years of advocating and building support with our colleagues, we still do not have the necessary support in the Legislature to get a full smoking ban passed.”
Polistina said he expects to introduce the new bill next year after the current legislative session ends.
It would prohibit smoking at table games; gradually reduce smoking at slot machines over 18 months, with specific distances between table games and the nearest smoking-permitted slot machines; and give the casinos 18 months to build enclosed rooms where gamblers could still smoke, but which would be staffed by employees who volunteer to work in them.
That proposal was denounced last week by Shawn Fain, international president of the United Auto Workers, which represents dealers at three Atlantic City casinos. He called the idea of smoking rooms “preposterous” and called on lawmakers to pass the original smoking ban bill.
If enacted in early 2024, Polistina’s measure would end smoking on the unenclosed casino floor by the fall of 2025, he said.
That did not go over well with the many casino workers.
Pete Naccarelli, a Borgata dealer and a leader of the employee anti-smoking movement, said Polistina is “copying and pasting casino executive talking points and attempting to present them as a credible solution. It’s shameful and disgusting.”
Senate President Nicholas Scutari declined comment Thursday. Assembly Speaker Craig Coughlin said “we’ll find a way to get this done in both houses of the Legislature,” but did not say which approach he favors.
New Jersey’s public smoking law specifically exempts casinos — something that workers have long sought to change.
But the casinos oppose a smoking ban on competitive grounds, saying Atlantic City would lose business and jobs to casinos in neighboring states where smoking is permitted. Workers dispute that, citing research showing business improved at numerous casinos after a smoking ban.
Recently, the industry has floated a proposal for enclosed smoking areas, but without giving details publicly. The Casino Association of New Jersey recently declined to provide details on its vision for smoking rooms. In a statement Thursday, the group said, “It is clear that more and more people realize that the bill, as drafted, will have a significant adverse effect on Atlantic City’s economy.”
Vicente said union members who disrupted the meeting made their point.
“Do I think this is going to change their minds and get a smoking ban passed? No,” he said. “Did we show them how angry we are that we’re the only ones who have to put up with this in our workplaces? Absolutely.”
___
Follow Wayne Parry on X, formerly Twitter, at www.twitter.com/WayneParryAC
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Sam Taylor
- Larry Hogan running for U.S. Senate seat in Maryland
- Meta announces changes for how AI images will display on Facebook, Instagram
- Food holds special meaning on the Lunar New Year. Readers share their favorite dishes
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- 'Wait Wait' for February 10, 2024: With Not My Job guest Lena Waithe
- $700M man Shohei Ohtani is talk of Dodgers spring training: 'Can't wait to watch him play'
- 'Pretty in Pink's' Jon Cryer and Andrew McCarthy ended their famous feud on 'The View'
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Ryan Grubb returning to Seattle to be Seahawks' OC after brief stop at Alabama, per reports
Ranking
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Larry Hogan running for U.S. Senate seat in Maryland
- Former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan is running for the US Senate
- Earthquake reported near Malibu, California Friday afternoon; aftershocks follow
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Shania Twain and Donny Osmond on what it's like to have a Las Vegas residency: The standard is so high
- How to defend against food poisoning at your Super Bowl party
- Migrant crossings fall sharply along Texas border, shifting to Arizona and California
Recommendation
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
Coronavirus FAQ: I'm immunocompromised. Will pills, gargles and sprays fend off COVID?
Manhunt for suspect in fatal shooting of deputy and wounding of another in Tennessee
2 more women accuse Jonathan Majors of physical, emotional abuse in new report
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
Small plane with 5 people aboard makes emergency landing on southwest Florida interstate
For Native American activists, the Kansas City Chiefs have it all wrong
Kansas’ AG is telling schools they must out trans kids to parents, even with no specific law