Boston Approves Ban on Smoking in City-Run Parks

Boston Approves Ban on Smoking in City-Run Parks

(AP) Boston approves ban on smoking in city-run parks
BOSTON
Boston has banned smoking in city-run parks, joining a growing list of American cities to do so.

The Boston Parks and Recreation Commission on Monday approved a ban covering the 251 parks, squares, cemeteries and other spaces run by the Parks and Recreation Department, including Boston Common, the Public Garden and Franklin Park. No one spoke in opposition to the ban.

The ban takes effect immediately and applies to tobacco, marijuana and other “lighted or vaporized” substances. Violators face a $250 fine.

The City Council approved the measure last month.


The Parks Department will post signs about the ban and the fine, and her department and the Health Commission will pass out informational materials, commission spokeswoman Jacque Goddard told The Boston Globe ( http://b.globe.com/19Y5Hok).

Police and park rangers will enforce the measure, which is an expansion of an existing law that prohibits smoking at playgrounds.

The ban will improve health, said Barbara Ferrer, executive director of the Boston Public Health Commission.


New York, Chicago, San Francisco and Los Angeles are among other large U.S. cities with similar bans.

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Information from: The Boston Globe, http://www.bostonglobe.com

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