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Introduced Version Senate Bill 604 History

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Key: Green = existing Code. Red = new code to be enacted


Senate Bill No. 604

(By Senator Snyder, Bailey, Bowman, Jackson,

Anderson, Fanning, Love and Facemyer)


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[Introduced February 15, 2002; referred to the Committee

on Health and Human Resources.]

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A BILL to amend article one, chapter sixteen of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, by adding thereto a new section, designated section four-a, relating to legislative findings; requiring the secretary of the department of health and human resources to propose legislative rules to regulate smoking of tobacco products by adults in indoor public places in this state; establishing standards, provisions and exemptions to be included in the proposed rules; allowing county, municipal and combined boards of health the opportunity to formally adopt and enforce the legislative rules; and declaring other rules or regulations on the subject to be void and unenforceable.

Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:

That article one, chapter sixteen of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, be amended by adding thereto a new section, designated section four-a, to read as follows:
ARTICLE 1. STATE PUBLIC HEALTH SYSTEM.
§16-1-4a. Proposal of rules for clean indoor air by the secretary.

(a) The Legislature of the state of West Virginia finds and determines that many county, municipal and combined boards of health throughout the state have adopted clean indoor air regulations to restrict smoking of tobacco products by adults in indoor public places in their jurisdictional boundaries. The several clean indoor air regulations vary considerably from jurisdiction to jurisdiction throughout the state, resulting in a patchwork pattern of regulation of smoking throughout the state. The West Virginia department of health and human resources desires to regulate the smoking of tobacco products in indoor public places across the state, and the Legislature finds that such regulation ought to be uniform throughout the state in order that all owners of public places and operators of the businesses operated therein be subject to the same regulations statewide, in order that all adults who choose to smoke tobacco products be subject to the same clean indoor air regulations statewide, and in order to assist law enforcement agencies and personnel charged with the duty to enforce clean indoor air regulations across the state.
(b) The secretary shall, not later than the twenty-fifth day of June, two thousand two, promulgate and deliver to the secretary of state legislative rules, but not emergency rules, in accordance with the provisions of article three, chapter twenty-nine-a of the code, that are reasonable, necessary and proper to regulate the smoking of tobacco products by adults within indoor public places in this state, which rules shall include, but need not be limited to, the following:
(1) The owner or operator of a business open to the public may designate such indoor smoking and nonsmoking areas as such person may desire, but shall designate not less than fifty percent of the area open to the public to be nonsmoking;
(2) The smoking of tobacco products shall be prohibited in hospitals, medical clinics, pharmacies, doctors' and dentists' offices and similar health care facilities, museums, elevators, restrooms and means of public transportation excepting ticketing, boarding and waiting areas;
(3) Public places in which a bar, tavern, retail tobacco specialty store, bowling alleys, bingo hall, or night club occupy a significant portion of the public area shall be exempt from the rules;
(4) Facilities that are licensed by the West Virginia racing commission pursuant to article twenty-three, chapter nineteen of the code, private residences, except when used as a child care facility, hotel and motel rooms when rented to guests, and assembly halls, conference or meeting rooms when they are rented or used for private functions shall be exempt from the rules;
(5) Provisions that reasonably accommodate the interests of adults who choose to smoke tobacco products and the interests of nonsmokers;
(6) Indoor public places that are of a small size, or are constructed in a way that makes designation of smoking and nonsmoking areas economically impractical or unmanageable shall be exempt from the rules, in whole or in part;
(7) Signs that do not unreasonably interfere with the operation of the business that is operated in a public place, of a size and at a location sufficient to notify persons that an area within a public place is designated as smoking or nonsmoking, shall be posted; and
(8) Provisions to assure that the costs of compliance with the rules do not unreasonably jeopardize the viability of the business operated in the public place.
(c) The clean indoor air rules promulgated pursuant to this section shall be enforceable in areas of this state that are not within the jurisdictional boundary of a county, municipal or combined board of health, and shall be enforceable by a county, municipal or combined board of health within its jurisdiction only if such board of health formally adopts the clean indoor air rules promulgated hereunder. Any other clean indoor air rules heretofore or hereafter adopted by a county, municipal or combined board of health shall be void and unenforceable sixty days after the effective date of the Legislature's approval of the rules promulgated pursuant to this section.


NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to require the secretary of the department of health and human resources to propose legislative rules to regulate smoking in indoor public places across the state. The bill sets out standards, provisions and exemptions that must be included in the rules. The rules will apply to those areas of the state that are not within the jurisdiction of a county, municipal or combined board of health. County, municipal or combined boards of health may formally adopt and thereafter enforce the rules. All other clean indoor air rules become void and unenforceable sixty days after the effective date of the Legislature's approval of the rules promulgated under this section.

This section is new; therefore, strike-throughs and underscoring have been omitted.
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