The village of West City has been chosen by the Illinois Liquor Control Commission to receive a grant in the amount of $1,100 to establish a comprehensive educational and enforcement program addressing minimum-age tobacco laws.
“We are pleased to receive this grant to enhance our efforts to reduce youth access to tobacco products. The health of the children in our community is very important,” Chief of Police Steve Mumbower said.
The commission, the state’s lead agency in developing strategies to reduce the illegal sale of tobacco products to minors, annually awards $1 million in grants to communities that are willing to implement its Tobacco Enforcement Program.
Participating communities are required to provide retail education to their retailers prior to implementing the enforcement component.
All tobacco retailers will receive the commission’s Tobacco Retailer Kit, which includes a review of state minimum-age tobacco laws, required signage and training guides for their personnel.
In addition, each tobacco retailer will receive three compliance checks.
Tobacco retailers within the entire program currently average over 90-percent compliance, and Illinois is ranked seventh nationwide in Synar tobacco retailer compliance rates.
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Nov 5, 2009
Nov 2, 2009
A call to arms for tobacco store owners
Let us consider the case of a cigar store owner. No food is served. No alcohol is available. The only products are cigars, tobacco products and accessories. Because no alcohol is served, it doesn't qualify for status as "Specialty Tobacco Bar."
Let us also assume that this establishment is owned by a retiree, the sole employee. He started this store because of his love of cigars. He has become something of an expert and customers often seek out his advice, much in the way a wine enthusiast may seek the opinion of a sommelier.
Under the expanded ban he will not be allowed to sample a new cigar in his own store in order to provide advice for his customers.
Who is being harmed and needs to be protected by the expanded ban? Does he not have the right to run his business to the best of his ability?
I would urge all tobacco store owners to call their City-County Council member and urge him or her to vote against Proposal 371.
Let us also assume that this establishment is owned by a retiree, the sole employee. He started this store because of his love of cigars. He has become something of an expert and customers often seek out his advice, much in the way a wine enthusiast may seek the opinion of a sommelier.
Under the expanded ban he will not be allowed to sample a new cigar in his own store in order to provide advice for his customers.
Who is being harmed and needs to be protected by the expanded ban? Does he not have the right to run his business to the best of his ability?
I would urge all tobacco store owners to call their City-County Council member and urge him or her to vote against Proposal 371.
Oct 30, 2009
Suspected heroin just tobacco at Columbia Point Marina
A specially packaged bundle of suspected heroin found in a bathroom at Columbia Point Marina turned out to be a block of chewing tobacco.
The package was found Tuesday when a maintenance worker bumped into the ventilation screen inside the bathroom, Richland police Capt. Mike Cobb said.
Officers initially thought the package had six, 1-ounce bindles of heroin and speculated it was left there for someone on a state Department of Corrections work crew to pick up, he said.
About 90 seconds after it was found, a van of inmates from Coyote Ridge Corrections Center pulled into the marina for a break, Cobb said. The inmates had been picking up litter along Highway 240.
Further testing showed the package contained a block of chewing tobacco that has the same consistency and appearance of black tar heroin, Cobb said.
Investigators still have no proof the package was left for a Coyote Ridge work crew inmate, but Cobb suspects it was.
"Who else would treat that as contraband other than someone in the penal system?" Cobb said. "It's the only reasonable explanation I can think of."
The package was found Tuesday when a maintenance worker bumped into the ventilation screen inside the bathroom, Richland police Capt. Mike Cobb said.
Officers initially thought the package had six, 1-ounce bindles of heroin and speculated it was left there for someone on a state Department of Corrections work crew to pick up, he said.
About 90 seconds after it was found, a van of inmates from Coyote Ridge Corrections Center pulled into the marina for a break, Cobb said. The inmates had been picking up litter along Highway 240.
Further testing showed the package contained a block of chewing tobacco that has the same consistency and appearance of black tar heroin, Cobb said.
Investigators still have no proof the package was left for a Coyote Ridge work crew inmate, but Cobb suspects it was.
"Who else would treat that as contraband other than someone in the penal system?" Cobb said. "It's the only reasonable explanation I can think of."
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Oct 28, 2009
Tobacco seized at city ferry port
CUSTOMS officials are investigating an alleged attempt to smuggle around 400 kilos of tobacco into Plymouth.
A 46-year-old man and a 71-year-old woman, both from the Durham area, were arrested at Plymouth ferry port on Saturday.
They were subsequently interviewed by HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) investigators.
UK Border Agency officers say they uncovered the haul in a people-carrier vehicle disembarking a ferry from Roscoff, France.
The tobacco was enough to make 800,000 cigarettes.Both people have been released on police bail until January 26, 2010.
The case is being handled by HMRC criminal investigators and inquiries are ongoing.The revenue allegedly evaded is estimated at around £46,000.
A 46-year-old man and a 71-year-old woman, both from the Durham area, were arrested at Plymouth ferry port on Saturday.
They were subsequently interviewed by HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) investigators.
UK Border Agency officers say they uncovered the haul in a people-carrier vehicle disembarking a ferry from Roscoff, France.
The tobacco was enough to make 800,000 cigarettes.Both people have been released on police bail until January 26, 2010.
The case is being handled by HMRC criminal investigators and inquiries are ongoing.The revenue allegedly evaded is estimated at around £46,000.
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info,
latest tobacco news,
news,
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Oct 26, 2009
Off Beat: Clark College professor’s theory goes up in smoke
Clark College is justifiably proud of its pioneering status as a no-smoking campus.In 2005, Clark became the first public college in Washington to abolish the use of tobacco.
Clark was also a national leader as one of just 25 colleges in the country to become tobacco-free.
And, Clark was the second community college in the U.S. to take that step, according to Rebecca Wale, environmental health manager.
... Which must have been an interesting turn of events for some former Clark students. It wasn’t just that tobacco was tolerated at Clark for decades. In 1946, it became part of a classroom exercise.
Echoes of that era popped up in The Columbian’s archives in a story about Tony Bacon, longtime Vancouver newsman who died in September.
In the story, Bacon recalled enrolling in Clark College as a 16-year-old in 1946. It was just after World War II, and many of Bacon’s classmates were veterans who were going back to school on the G.I. Bill.
Homer Foster, who taught history and social sciences, liked to conduct experiments in class. His classes were filled with veterans, and half of them were smokers.
Foster had heard that smoking impaired reasoning abilities, Bacon related. Foster set about to test this point on the first day of the quarter. The professor divided his students into smokers and non-smokers, and handed out an exam.
When the results were in, the professor was amazed at the results: The smokers had way better grades than the non-smokers, Bacon said.
"Poor old Homer Foster decided then and there that he should become a smoker," Bacon told the writer.
"He wasn’t very adept at it, but he kept puffing away because of the results of this hysterical experiment."
Hatching a penguin
There’s another bit of irony in the no-smoking policy: Clark College might owe its "Penguin Nation" identity to something that has been banned from campus.
According to one story, the roots of the school’s mascot could be traced to a Clark College student who swiped a mechanical penguin from a promotional display at a local drug store.
As the story goes, the pilfered penguin advertised Kool cigarettes.
Clark was also a national leader as one of just 25 colleges in the country to become tobacco-free.
And, Clark was the second community college in the U.S. to take that step, according to Rebecca Wale, environmental health manager.
... Which must have been an interesting turn of events for some former Clark students. It wasn’t just that tobacco was tolerated at Clark for decades. In 1946, it became part of a classroom exercise.
Echoes of that era popped up in The Columbian’s archives in a story about Tony Bacon, longtime Vancouver newsman who died in September.
In the story, Bacon recalled enrolling in Clark College as a 16-year-old in 1946. It was just after World War II, and many of Bacon’s classmates were veterans who were going back to school on the G.I. Bill.
Homer Foster, who taught history and social sciences, liked to conduct experiments in class. His classes were filled with veterans, and half of them were smokers.
Foster had heard that smoking impaired reasoning abilities, Bacon related. Foster set about to test this point on the first day of the quarter. The professor divided his students into smokers and non-smokers, and handed out an exam.
When the results were in, the professor was amazed at the results: The smokers had way better grades than the non-smokers, Bacon said.
"Poor old Homer Foster decided then and there that he should become a smoker," Bacon told the writer.
"He wasn’t very adept at it, but he kept puffing away because of the results of this hysterical experiment."
Hatching a penguin
There’s another bit of irony in the no-smoking policy: Clark College might owe its "Penguin Nation" identity to something that has been banned from campus.
According to one story, the roots of the school’s mascot could be traced to a Clark College student who swiped a mechanical penguin from a promotional display at a local drug store.
As the story goes, the pilfered penguin advertised Kool cigarettes.
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