Durham health officials post signs reminding residents of cigarette, vape ban on city sidewalks

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Monday, January 27, 2020
Durham health officials post signs reminding residents of cigarette ban
Durham health officials post signs reminding residents of cigarette ban

DURHAM, N.C. (WTVD) -- Durham has deep roots in the soil that produced tobacco, and marketing the leaf helped make the Bull City the fast-growing metropolis it is today.

But Monday, as boosters push Durham's modern image as The City of Medicine, reminders of tobacco's toxic effects were posted on downtown streets. "No smoking, including electronic cigarettes, on this sidewalk" is the message on more than 100 signs posted around town.

The message, from the Durham County Health Department, could affect people like Vernadell Carrington.

Carrington said she works across from the CCB Plaza. "Where I work at, here, a lot of people smoke, I stand out here, I see a lot of people sitting in the park, smoking!"

The signs are part of the county's effort to educate the public. The health department developed rules to regulate smoking in public areas, including sidewalks and parks, years ago. Michael Scott of the National African American Tobacco Prevention Network was the county's tobacco educator at the time.

"While I was there, the enforcement piece was more about education and then referring folks, if they're interested, to smoking cessation classes," said Scott. "Classes where they could learn how to quit smoking."

Carrington, who started smoking as a teenager, said it's a hard habit to break as an adult. "I'm trying to quit, because I have diabetes."

She said the signs could help her on her journey away from tobacco use. "My thing is, I don't smoke inside my house," Carrington said.

The rules, part of an ordinance regulating smoking in Durham's public areas, call for a $50 fine if a smoker is cited by "a person authorized by...County Commissioners or the City Council" but does not specify who that person might be.

But Scott, the tobacco opponent who applauded the use of the signs, said, "We're not trying to punish folks for being addicted to a product that was created to addict them. So it's about protecting the public health, educating folks to where smoking is not allowed."