Restoring Local Control to Communities in Iowa
Why Local Policies
• Local smokefree campaigns engage the whole community in a discussion of public health and policies aren't adopted unless a majority of the community supports them.
• Local control works because it allows a community to have a discussion about the risks of secondhand smoke and develop a solution that fits the area.
• Local policies are easier to enforce because they are enforced by a community-based agency such as a city health department or police department.
• Compliance with local policies is higher due to greater public
knowledge and self enforcement.
Workplace Policies Work
• Exposure to secondhand smoke in the workplace causes more death and disease than all other regulated occupational substances combined.
• Smokefree workplace policies can enhance productivity by reducing the effects of secondhand smoke on nonsmokers and reducing excess absenteeism among workers.
• Smokers employed at workplaces with a smokefree policy are 38% more likely to quit smoking and could save employers an estimated $960 per worker in excess illness cost each year.
• There are laws protecting workers from many other toxic chemicals such as asbestos, pesticides, and radon.
• Smokefree workplace policies have been proven to improve worker
morale and health.
The Public Supports Local Control
• According to the 2004 Adult Tobacco Survey conducted by the Gallup Organization, 88.0 percent of Iowans agreed that people should be protected from secondhand smoke.
• As of January 2007, more than 2,507 cities or municipalities and 21 states, including New York, Delaware, Connecticut, California, Maine, Florida, Idaho, Massachusetts, Utah, and South Dakota, in the U.S. have passed clean indoor air ordinances and laws.
• 52.9% of the U.S. population is protected by smoking laws and ordinances.
• Local governments in 35 states, including Minnesota, Wisconsin, Missouri, Colorado, Illinois, and Nebraska have the ability to protect their citizens from the dangers of secondhand smoke while 21 states have passed statewide laws prohibiting smoking in public places.

