Senate approves bill authorizing police
to dispense warnings to smokers in cars with children
EDITOR'S NOTE: a new study from a very unlikely support - the American Chemical Society - lends support to the health problems that motivated this legislation. Click here for more details.
STATE HOUSE – The Senate passed legislation (2014-S 2084) today
authorizing police officers to provide a verbal warning to an individual who is
smoking in a vehicle containing a restrained child.
The bill,
sponsored by Sen. V. Susan Sosnowski
(D-Dist. 37, South Kingstown, New Shoreham), would allow law enforcement
officials to notify the offending driver of the dangers of exposing young
children to secondhand smoke. The act does not allow a police officer to stop
or search a motor vehicle based solely on the individual’s decision to smoke
with a child in the car.
The Senate passed the legislation in a 35 to 0 vote. According
to Global Advisors on Smoke-free Policy (GASP), 17 states in the nation have passed
laws to prohibit people from smoking inside vehicles transporting foster
children. GASP is a nonprofit organization which works to promote a
tobacco-free existence.
Senators Joshua Miller (D-Dist. 28, Cranston,
Providence), Elizabeth A. Crowley (D-Dist. 16, Central Falls, Cumberland,
Pawtucket), Juan M. Pichardo (D-Dist. 2, Providence) and Catherine Cool Rumsey
(D-Dist. 34, Exeter, Charlestown, Hopkinton, Richmond, West Greenwich) cosponsor
the bill. It will now be transmitted to the House of Representatives for
consideration.