Pubdate: Fri, May 14 1999 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 1999 Associated Press Author: Brad Cain, the Associated Press BILL PREVENTS CITIES FROM BANNING SMOKING IN BARS SALEM, Ore. - A bill to prevent cities from enacting bans against smoking in bars and taverns won approval Friday in the Oregon House. The bill would not affect Corvallis, which enacted a ban on smoking in bars last year, but it would prevent other cities from doing the same thing. Backers of the bill said Oregon already restricts smoking in many public places, including restaurants, and that it's going too far to tell bar customers they can't smoke in public. Rep. Ryan Deckert, a Beaverton Democrat who sponsored the bill, said bars are patronized only by adults and that they should be free to decide whether they want be in a place that allows smoking. "Bars and taverns should be the one last place in which smokers are able to congregate in public," said Deckert, who's a non-smoker. But opponents said the Legislature should not try to prevent cities from taking actions to protect bar employees as well as patrons from the harmful effects of second-hand smoke. "It certainly isn't a matter of personal choice for the people who have to work in these places," said Rep. Diane Rosenbaum, D-Portland. The American Cancer Society and other public health groups said Friday they would work to defeat the bill in the Senate. "The only winners today were the tobacco industry and those who profit from them," said cancer society spokesman Jerry Spegmen. "The losers are local communities and those whose health will suffer from the effects of second-hand smoke." Some representatives said they found it ironic that House voted earlier in the day to let cities zone sex businesses into restricted areas but then passed a bill taking away their rights to enact tavern smoking bans. Rep. Lane Shetterly, R-Dallas, also said that cities should be given the freedom to be "quirky" and adopt ordinances that reflect local sensibilities. "Communities should have the right to establish their own identities," Shetterly said. But supporters of the measure said allowing cities across the state to ban smoking in bars and taverns would hurt Oregon's hospitality industry. "Often people come to taverns because they want to smoke and drink," said Rep. Jackie Winters, R-Salem. The bill, HB2806, was sent to the Senate on a 36-22 vote. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea