Pubdate: Mon, 11 Aug 1997 U.S. to widen smoking ban on federal property WASHINGTON (Reuter) President Clinton plans to sign an executive order this week imposing the broadest smoking ban on federal property ever enacted, the Washington Post reported in Tuesday editions. The newspaper quoted unnamed administration officials as saying that Clinton's order would set a standard policy across the government and extend existing prohibitions to places currently exempt, such as military officers' clubs. In addition, it would ban people from lighting up their cigarettes outside federal office building entrances. ``It's become clearer and clearer that this is a significant health risk, and we wanted a uniform government policy that brings all the agencies up to that level,'' one administration official, who declined to be named, told the Post. The U.S. military and many federal agencies already restrict smoking in their facilities, but the presidential order would ban smoking in virtually every executivebranch building owned or leased by the federal government and forbid outdoor smoking in courtyards and near building entrances, according to the newspaper report. The only exceptions would be rooms with separate ventilation systems to the outside, residential units such as military barracks, and some other narrow areas such as in ``undercover, miltary or diplomatic situations that are essential to accomplish agency missions,'' the paper said. The order would give agency managers a year to conform to the new standards, the Post said.