If a smoker in Los Angeles lights up within 10 feet of an outdoor dining area or 40 feet of a food truck, it could soon be an expensive cigarette.
L.A. last year became the largest city in the nation to enact a smoke-free outdoor dining ordinance. After giving restaurants a year to post the required signs, the law goes into effect Tuesday — and violators will face fines of up to $500. “L.A. and California have always led the way when it comes to anti-smoking,” Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said at a news conference.
Smoking already is prohibited in L.A. at city beaches, farmers markets and parks, as well as within 25 feet of playgrounds, bleachers, sports fields and picnic areas. “Just like sex offenders, cigarette smokers are being pushed out of Los Angeles one ordinance at a time,” the LA Weekly newspaper recently commented. City Councilman Bernard Parks has proposed extending the no-smoking zone to all businesses.
The council voted unanimously in January 2010 to pass the outdoor dining ordinance, which is one of the few to include food trucks, now a fixture on the city’s gastronomic landscape. Matt Geller, president of an advocacy group for 130 L.A. food trucks, is thrilled. “It’s great,” he told the Los Angeles Daily News. “I get one or two e-mails a week from the public saying, ‘Could you please get your vendors to stop people from smoking in line?’”
Dr. Kathy Magliato, a surgeon and president of the American Heart Association, told the Associated Press that exposure to secondhand smoke increases the risk of heart disease and lung cancer. And she referred to studies that have shown that smoking restrictions can reduce the incidence of such diseases.
Some smokers’ rights advocates, on the other hand, are fuming. “Sitting outside in L.A., the cars and smog are going to kill you faster than secondhand smoke,” said Robert Best, western regional director of Citizens Freedom Alliance.
Bars and nightclubs that require patrons to be at least 18 years old are exempt from the ordinance. “Does that mean we all have to become alcoholics now to smoke?” a patron at a coffeehouse in the San Fernando Valley quipped.


