Chapter
04-198
2004 -- S 2029 SUBSTITUTE B
Enacted 06/29/04
A N A C T
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY
--
RHODE ISLAND WORKERS' SAFETY
ACT OF 2004
Introduced By: Senators
Sosnowski, Roberts, Lenihan, Polisena, and Sheehan
Date
Introduced: January 08, 2004
It is enacted by the General
Assembly as follows:
SECTION
1. Chapters 23-20.6, 23-20.7 and 23-20.7.1 of the General Laws entitled
"Smoking in Public
Places" are hereby repealed in their entirety.
CHAPTER
23-20.6
Smoking in Public Places
23-20.6-1.
Legislative intent. -- The use of tobacco for smoking purposes
is being found
to be increasingly dangerous,
not only to the person smoking, but also to the non-smoking person
who is required to breathe the
contaminated air. The most pervasive intrusion of the non-smoker's
right to unpolluted air space is
the uncontrolled smoking in public places. The legislature intends,
by the enactment of this
chapter, to protect the health and atmospheric environment of the non-
smoker by regulating smoking in
certain public areas.
23-20.6-2.
Smoking prohibited in certain public areas -- Smoking sections in eating
facilities. -- (a) Smoking tobacco in any form is a public nuisance
and dangerous to public health
and shall not be permitted in
any of the following places used by or open to the public: the state
house, elevators, indoor movie
theaters, libraries, art galleries, museums, concert halls,
auditoriums, buses, primary,
secondary or post secondary school buildings, colleges and
universities (including
dormitories), and public hallways in court buildings, hallways of elderly
housing complexes, supermarkets,
medical offices, public laundries as defined in chapter 16 of
title 5 and hospitals and other
health care and assisted living facilities.
(b) The proprietor or other person in charge of a public area listed in
subsection (a) shall
make reasonable efforts to
prevent smoking and shall post no smoking and warning signs
conspicuously in these areas.
(c) Any person who violates this chapter shall be deemed to be contributing to
the
maintenance of a public nuisance
in a public place and shall be subject to a fine of not less than
fifty dollars ($50.00), nor more
than five hundred dollars ($500), which shall be assessed and
recovered in a civil action
brought by the attorney general in any court of competent jurisdiction.
Each day the violation is
committed or permitted to continue shall constitute a separate offense
and shall be punishable as such.
Any penalty assessed and recovered in an action brought under
this subsection shall be paid to
the general treasurer and added to the general fund.
(d) This section does not prohibit smoking in the areas listed in subsection
(a) if the
smoking is confined to areas
separated from those used by the general public and identified by
signs as smoking areas.
(e) (1) Eating facilities with a seating capacity of fifty (50) or more persons
shall have
separate seating for nonsmokers
and smokers. For purposes of this section, an "eating facility"
means any building, structure,
room or area maintained as, or held out to the public as, an
enclosure where meals are served
for consideration of payment; excluded, however, are bars,
nightclubs, lounges, dance
clubs, and privately sponsored social affairs. Appropriate
arrangements shall be made to
ask patrons their preference for the non-smoking or smoking
section prior to being seated.
(2) The proprietor or person in charge of the eating facility shall post signs
as follows:
(A) At the entry stating that the establishment is required by law to have a
no-smoking
section; and
(B) In the smoking sections identifying the area.
(3)
The department of health is authorized to adopt rules and regulations necessary
for
the implementation and
enforcement of this subsection.
23-20.6-3.
Severability. -- If any section, subsection, sentence, clause,
phrase, or portion
of this chapter is for any
reason held invalid or unconstitutional by any court of competent
jurisdiction, that portion shall
be deemed a separate, distinct, and independent provision and this
holding shall not affect the
validity of the remaining portions of this chapter.
23-20.6-4.
Signs. -- Signs required by this chapter may be provided by the
state
department of health at cost.
CHAPTER
23-20.7
Workplace Smoking Pollution
Control Act
23-20.7-1.
Legislative intent. -- The use of tobacco for smoking purposes
is being found
to be increasingly dangerous,
not only to the person smoking but also to the nonsmoking person
who is required to breathe the
contaminated air. The most pervasive intrusion of the nonsmoker's
right to unpolluted air space is
the uncontrolled smoking in the workplace. The legislature
intends, by the enactment of
this chapter, to protect the health and atmospheric environment of
the nonsmoker by regulating
smoking in the workplace.
23-20.7-2.
Short title. -- This chapter shall be known as the "Rhode
Island Workplace
Smoking Pollution Control
Act".
23-20.7-3.
Purpose. -- (a) Because the smoking of tobacco or any other weed
or plant is
a danger to health and is a
cause of material annoyance and discomfort to those who are present
in confined places, the
legislature declares that the purposes of this chapter are:
(1) To protect the public health and welfare by regulating smoking in the
workplace; and
(2) To minimize the toxic effects of smoking in the workplace by requiring an
employer
to adopt a policy that will
accommodate, insofar as possible, the preferences of nonsmokers and
smokers.
(b) This chapter is not intended to create any right to sue or to impair or
alter an
employer's prerogative to prohibit
smoking in the workplace. If an employer allows employees to
smoke in the workplace, this
chapter requires:
(1) That the employer make reasonable accommodations for the preferences of
both
nonsmoking and smoking employees,
particularly those employees who, as a result of physical
condition, are unduly sensitive
to tobacco smoke;
(2) All nonsmoking areas shall be designated and conspicuously marked with
signs;
(3) Employers are prohibited from terminating, without due cause, or
discriminating
against an employee solely
because the employee exercised his or her right under this chapter.
23-20.7-4.
Definitions. -- As used in this chapter:
(1) "Employee" means any person who is employed by any employer in
consideration
for direct or indirect monetary
wage or profit;
(2) "Employer" means any person who employs the service of an
individual person;
(3) "Enclosed" means closed in by a roof and four walls with
appropriate openings for
ingress and egress and is not
intended to mean areas commonly described as public lobbies;
(4) "Legislature" means the general assembly of the state of Rhode
Island;
(5) "Person" means any individual person, firm, partnership,
association, corporation,
company, organization, or legal
entity of any kind;
(6) "Smoking" or "to smoke" or "smoke" means and
includes the inhaling, exhaling,
burning, or carrying of any
lighted smoking equipment or paraphernalia for tobacco or any other
weed or plant; and
(7) "Workplace" means any enclosed area of a structure or portion of
the structure
intended for occupancy by
business entities which will provide primarily, but not exclusively,
clerical, professional, or
business services of the business entity, or which will provide primarily,
but not exclusively, clerical,
professional, or business services to other business entities or to the
public, at that location. The
workplace includes, but is not limited to, office spaces in office
buildings, office spaces in all
state and municipal office buildings, office spaces in all federal
office buildings where other
than federal employees are present, medical office waiting rooms, all
factory or manufacturing plant
areas, libraries, museums, hospitals, nursing homes, other medical
treatment facilities, and in all
the mentioned places.
23-20.7-5.
Regulation of smoking in the workplace. -- (a) Each employer who
operates
a workplace in this state shall
within three (3) months of adoption of this chapter adopt,
implement, and maintain a
written smoking policy which will contain, at a minimum, a policy
which is designed to protect the
health and atmospheric environment of the nonsmoker and to
ensure a comfortable environment
for all employees, and the requirement that any nonsmoking
employee may object to his or
her employer about the smoke hazard or discomfort in his or her
workplace. Using existing means
of ventilation or separation or partition of the work space:
(1) The employer shall attempt to reach a reasonable accommodation to protect
the
health and atmospheric
environment of the nonsmoking employees and to ensure a comfortable
environment for all employees.
(2) The employer shall either make accommodations or completely prohibit
smoking in
those areas of the workplace
where nonsmoking employees may reasonably be expected to be
adversely affected by passive
cigarette smoke.
(b) The employer's smoking policy shall be announced within three (3) weeks of
adoption to all employees
working in workplaces in this state and posted conspicuously in all
workplaces under the employer's
jurisdiction.
(c) The director of the department of health shall promulgate rules and
regulations to
enforce the provisions of this
chapter.
23-20.7-6.
Where smoking not regulated. -- This chapter is not intended to
regulate
smoking in the following places
and under the following conditions within the state:
(1) A private home which may serve as a workplace;
(2) Any office space leased or rented by a sole independent contractor for his
or her own
use;
(3) A private enclosed workplace occupied exclusively by smokers, even though
this
workplace is visited by
nonsmokers, excepting places in which smoking is prohibited by the fire
marshal or by other law,
ordinance, or regulation.
23-20.7-7.
Penalties and enforcement. -- (a) The department of health,
having received
a written and signed letter of
complaint from an employee citing a violation of this chapter, shall
enforce this entire chapter
against violations by either of the following actions:
(1) Serving written notice to comply to an employer, with a copy of the notice
to the
complaining employee, requiring
the employer to correct within ten (10) days any violation of a
section of this chapter.
(2) Upon receiving a second complaint at the department of health for the same
or
continued violation by the same
employer, the complaint shall be resolved by calling upon the
attorney general to maintain,
without delay, an action for injunction to enforce the provisions of
this chapter, to cause the
correction of this violation, and for assessment and recovery of a civil
penalty for this violation.
(b) An employer who violates this chapter shall be liable for a civil penalty,
not to be
less than fifty dollars ($50.00)
nor to exceed five hundred dollars ($500) which shall be assessed
and recovered in a civil action
brought by the attorney general in any court of competent
jurisdiction. Each day the
violation is committed or permitted to continue shall constitute a
separate offense and shall be
punishable as a separate offense. Any penalty assessed and
recovered in an action brought
pursuant to this subsection shall be paid to the general treasurer
and added to the general fund.
(c)
In undertaking the enforcement of this chapter, the state is assuming an
undertaking
only to promote the general
welfare. It is not assuming, nor is it imposing on its officers and
employees, an obligation for
breach of which it is liable in money damages to any person who
claims that this breach
proximately caused injury.
CHAPTER
23-20.7.1
Off-Duty Rights to Privacy
by Employees
23-20.7.1-1.
Prohibited condition of employment -- Smoking by employees outside
course of employment. -- (a) No employer or agent of any employer shall
require, as a condition
of employment, that any employee
or prospective employee refrain from smoking or using
tobacco products outside the course
of his or her employment, or otherwise discriminate against
any individual with respect to
his or her compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of
employment for smoking or using
tobacco products outside the course of his or her employment.
Provided, however, that the
following employers shall be exempt from the provisions of this
chapter: Any employer which is a
nonprofit organization which as one of its primary purposes or
objectives discourages the use
of tobacco products by the general public.
(b) In any civil action alleging a violation of this chapter the court may:
(1) Award up to three (3) times the actual damages to a prevailing employee or
prospective employee;
(2)
Award court costs to a prevailing employee or prospective employee;
(3) Afford injunctive relief against any employer who commits or proposes to
commit a
violation of this chapter.
(c) Nothing contained in this chapter shall be construed to affect the
provisions of
chapter 20.7 of this title.
SECTION
2. Title 23 of the General Laws entitled "Health and Safety" is
hereby
amended by adding thereto the
following chapter:
CHAPTER
20.10
PUBLIC HEALTH AND WORKPLACE
SAFETY ACT
23-20.10-1.
Short title. – This chapter shall be known as the “Public Health and
Workplace Safety Act.”
23-20.10-2.
Definitions. – The following words and phrases, whenever used in
this
chapter, shall be construed as
defined in this section:
(1)
“Assisted living residence” means a residence that provides personal
assistance, and
meals to adults in accordance
with chapter 23-17.4 of the general laws.
(2)
“Bar” means an establishment that is devoted to the serving of alcoholic
beverages for
consumption by guests on the
premises and in which the serving of food is only incidental to the
consumption of those beverages,
including, but not limited to, taverns, nightclubs, cocktail
lounges and cabarets.
(3)
“Business” means a sole proprietorship, partnership, joint venture,
corporation, or
other business entity formed for
profit-making purposes, including retail establishments where
goods or services are sold as
well as professional corporations and other entities where legal,
medial, dental, engineering,
architectural or other professional services are delivered.
(4)
“Employee” means a person who is employed by an employer in consideration for
direct or indirect monetary
wages or profit, and a person who volunteers his or her services for a
nonprofit entity.
(5)
“Employer” means a person, business, partnership, association, corporation,
including
a municipal corporation, trust
or nonprofit entity that employs the services of one or more
individual persons.
(6)
“Enclosed area” means all space between a floor and ceiling that is enclosed on
all
sides by solid walls or windows
(exclusive of doorways), which extend from the floor to the
ceiling.
(7)
“Health care facility” means an office or institution providing care or
treatment of
diseases, whether physical,
mental, emotional, or other medical, physiological or psychological
conditions, including, but not
limited to, hospitals, rehabilitation hospitals or other clinics,
including weight control
clinics, nursing homes, homes for the aging or chronically ill,
laboratories, and offices of
surgeons, chiropractors, physical therapists, physicians, dentists, and
all specialists within these
professions. This definition shall include all waiting rooms, hallways,
private rooms, semi-private
rooms and wards within health care facilities.
(8)
“Place of employment” means an area under the control of a public or private
employer that employees normally
frequent during the course of employment, including, but not
limited to, work areas,
employees lounges, restrooms, conference rooms, meeting rooms,
classrooms, employee cafeterias,
and hallways. Vehicles owned by a public or private employer
are covered under this
definition provided that the vehicle is used by more than one (1) person. A
private residence is not a
“place of employment” unless it is used as a child care, adult day care or
health care facility.
(9)
“Public place” means an enclosed area to which the public is invited or in
which the
public is permitted, including,
but not limited to, banks, bars, educational facilities, health care
facilities, laundromats, public
transportation facilities, reception areas, restaurants, retail food
production and marketing
establishments, retail service establishments, retail stores, shopping
malls, sports arenas, the state
house, theaters and waiting rooms. A private residence is not a
“public place” unless it is used
as a child care, adult day care or health care facility.
(10)
“Restaurant” means an eating establishment, including, but not limited to,
coffee
shops, cafeterias, and private
and public school cafeterias, which gives or offers for sale food to
the public, guests or employees,
as well as kitchens and catering facilities in which food is
prepared on the premises for
serving elsewhere. The term “restaurant” shall include a bar area
within the restaurant.
(11) "Retail tobacco store" means a retail store utilized primarily
for the sale of tobacco
products and accessories in which
the total annual revenues generated by the sale of other
products are no greater than
twenty-five percent (25%) of the total revenue for the establishment.
The division of taxation shall
be responsible for the determination under this section and shall
promulgate any rules or forms
necessary for the implementation of this section.
(12)
"Service line" means an indoor line in which one (1) or more persons
are waiting for
or receiving service of any kind,
whether or not the service involves the exchange of money.
(13)
"Shopping mall" means an enclosed public walkway or hall area that
serves to
connect retail or professional
establishments.
(14)
"Smoking" means inhaling, exhaling, burning or carrying any lighted
cigar,
cigarette, pipe, weed, plant, or
other combustible substance in any manner or in any form;
provided, however, that smoking
shall not include burning during a religious ceremony.
(15)
(a) “Smoking bar” means an establishment whose business is primarily devoted to
the serving of tobacco products
for consumption on the premises, in which the annual revenues
generated by tobacco sales are
greater than fifty percent (50%) of the total revenue for the
establishment and the serving of
food or alcohol is only incidental to the consumption of such
tobacco products. The
establishment must annually demonstrate that revenue generated from the
serving of tobacco products is
greater than the total combined revenue generated by the serving of
beverages and food. The division
of taxation in the department of administration shall be
responsible for the
determination under this section and shall promulgate any rules or forms
necessary for the implementation
of this section.
(b)
Smoking bars shall only allow consumption of food and beverages sold by the
establishment on the premises
and the establishment shall have public access only from the street.
(c)
Any smoking bar as defined herein, is required to provide a proper ventilation
system
which will prevent the migration
of smoke into the street.
(16)
"Sports arena" means sports pavilions, stadiums, (indoor or outdoor)
organized
sports fields, gymnasiums,
health spas, boxing arenas, swimming pools, roller and ice rinks,
bowling alleys and other similar
places where members of the general public assemble to engage
in physical exercise,
participate in athletic competition or witness sports or other events.
(17)
"Legislature" means the general assembly of the state of Rhode
Island.
23-20.10-3.
Prohibition of smoking in public places. – Smoking shall be
prohibited in
all enclosed public places
within the state of Rhode Island, including, but not limited to, the
following places:
(1)
Aquariums, galleries, libraries and museums;
(2)
Areas available to and customarily used by the general public in businesses and
nonprofit entities patronized by
the public, including, but not limited to, professional offices,
banks, laundromats, hotels and
motels.
(3)
Bars;
(4)
Bingo facilities when a bingo game is in progress;
(5)
Convention facilities;
(6)
Elevators;
(7)
Facilities primarily used for exhibiting a motion picture, stage, drama,
lecture,
musical, recital or other
similar performance;
(8)
Health care facilities;
(9)
Licensed child care and adult day care facilities;
(10)
Lobbies, hallways and other common areas in apartment buildings, condominiums,
trailer parks, retirement facilities,
nursing homes and other multiple unit residential facilities with
more than four (4) units;
(11)
Polling places;
(12)
Public transportation facilities, including buses and taxicabs, under the
authority of
the state of Rhode Island, and
ticket, boarding and waiting areas of public transit depots;
(13)
Restaurants;
(14)
Restrooms, lobbies, reception areas, hallways and other common use areas;
(15)
Retail stores;
(16)
Rooms, chambers, places of meeting or public assembly, including school
buildings,
under the control of an agency,
board, commission, committee or council of the state of Rhode
Island or a political
subdivision of the state when a public meeting is in progress, to the extent
the
place is subject to the jurisdiction
of the state of Rhode Island;
(17)
Schools; including, primary, secondary and post-secondary education facilities;
(18)
Service lines;
(19)
Shopping malls;
(20)
Sports arenas, including outdoor arenas.
23-20.10-4.
Prohibition of smoking in places of employment. – Smoking shall be
prohibited in all enclosed
facilities within places of employment without exception. This includes
common work areas, auditoriums,
classrooms, conference and meeting rooms, private offices,
elevators, hallways, medical
facilities, cafeterias, employee lounges, stairs, restrooms, vehicles,
and all other enclosed
facilities.
This
prohibition on smoking shall be communicated to all existing employees by the
effective date of this chapter and
to all prospective employees upon their application for
employment.
23-20.10-5.
Outdoor smoking space. – Nothing in this chapter shall prohibit an
employer from providing an
outdoor smoking space for their employees. Provided, however, that
any employer who provides an
outdoor area for its employees to smoke must provide an area
which is physically separated
from the enclosed workplace so as to prevent the migration of
smoke into the workplace.
23-20.10-6. Where smoking not regulated. – (a) Notwithstanding any
other provision
of this chapter to the contrary,
the following areas shall be exempt from the provisions of this
chapter.
(1)
Private residences, except when used as a licensed child care, adult day care
or health
care facility;
(2)
Hotel and motel rooms that are rented to guests and are designated as smoking
rooms;
provided, however, that not more
than fifty percent (50%) of rooms rented to guests in a hotel or
motel may be so designated;
(3)
Retail tobacco stores; provided that smoke from these places does not
infiltrate into
areas where smoking is
prohibited under the provisions of this chapter;
(4)
Private and semi-private rooms or designated areas in assisted living
residences and
nursing facilities as allowed by
regulation of the department of health under chapters 23-17.4 and
23-17 of the general laws;
(5)
Outdoor areas of places of employment, except those covered by the provisions
of
section 23-20.10-5;
(6)
Any smoking bar as defined in section 23-20.10-2(15);
(7)
Any facility operated under a class D liquor license provided the class D
liquor
license is held by a nonprofit
or charitable corporation with a defined membership, is not
ordinarily a place of public
accommodation but is distinctly private, and employs not more than
ten (10) employees;
(8)
Any facility operated exclusively under a class C liquor license and employs
not more
than ten (10) employees.
(b)
Exemptions (7) and (8) above shall remain in effect until October 1, 2006.
(c)
The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to any stage performance
provided that
smoking is part of a theatrical
production.
23-20.10-6.1.
Pari mutual facilities. – (a) Any pari mutual facility established
under
chapter 3.1 or 7 of title 41 or
any pari mutual licensee under chapter 61.2 of title 42 shall provide
designated smoking and
nonsmoking gaming areas in their facilities.
(b)
The designated nonsmoking gaming area shall be physically separated from any
smoking area and shall be
required to have separate and distinct ventilation systems so as to
prohibit the migration of smoke
into the nonsmoking area.
(c)
Except as provided for in paragraph (d), any bar or restaurant located in a pari
mutual
facility shall be nonsmoking and
be physically separate from any smoking area and shall have a
separate ventilation system so
as to prohibit the migration of smoke into the restaurant.
(d)
The prohibitions of this chapter shall not apply to any bar which is presently
in
existence, located in, and not
physically separated from a designated smoking area.
(e)
Any licensee of a pari mutual facility shall promulgate rules and regulations
to allow
their employees the right to
work in a smoke free environment. These rules shall include, but not
be limited to, provisions on the
right to opt out of working in a smoking area and a provision that
no adverse impact or action
could take place against the employee if they request to opt out of a
smoking area. The rules
promulgated by the licensee shall be filed with the lottery commission
with copies to the general
assembly and the department of health no later than March 1, 2005.
(f)
Commencing January 1, 2005, any pari mutual licensee shall file an annual
report with
the lottery commission with
copies to the general assembly and department of health detailing
smoke mitigation efforts
undertaken by the licensee during the previous year and plans for the
upcoming year. The licensee
shall be required to monitor air quality with current appropriate
technology. A professional HVAC
engineer (or other appropriate professional) shall certify the
monitoring process and results.
The results of the monitoring process shall be included in the
annual report.
(g)
Any enactment relating to the provisions of this section on pari mutual
facilities or
licensees shall be by statute as
enacted by the general assembly, provided however that the
general assembly may by statute
delegate such authority to the cities and towns.
23-20.10-7.
Posting of signs. – (a) "No smoking" signs or the
international "No
smoking" symbol (consisting
of a pictorial representation of a burning cigarette enclosed in a red
circle with a red bar across it)
shall be clearly and conspicuously posted in every public place and
place of employment where
smoking is prohibited by this chapter, by the owner, operator,
manager or other person in
control of that place. Signs required by this chapter may be provided
by the state department of
health at cost.
(b)
Every public place and place of employment where smoking is prohibited by this
chapter shall have posted at
every entrance a conspicuous sign clearly stating that smoking is
prohibited.
(c)
All signs necessary to comply with this section shall be attached at eye level
and shall
contain the following words
"IT IS ILLEGAL TO SMOKE IN THIS ESTABLISHMENT". To
report a violation call "
."
23-20.10-8.
Nonretaliation. – No person or employer shall discharge, refuse to
hire or in
any manner retaliate against an
employee, applicant for employment or customer because that
employee, applicant or customer
exercises any rights afforded by this chapter or reports or
attempts to prosecute a
violation of this chapter.
23-20.10-9.
Enforcement. – (a) The director of health shall promulgate such
rules and
regulations including the
complaint forms, as are necessary to carry out the mandates of this
chapter within one hundred
eighty (180) days of passage.
(b)
Notice of the provisions of this chapter shall be given to all applicants for a
business
license in the state of Rhode
Island, to all law enforcement agencies, and to any business required
to be registered with the
secretary of state’s office.
(c)
Any citizen who desires to register a complaint under this chapter may initiate
such a
complaint with the department of
health.
(d)
The department of health, having received a written and signed letter of
complaint
citing a violation of this
chapter, shall enforce this entire chapter against violations by either of
the following actions:
(1)
Serving written notice to comply to an employer, with a copy of the notice to
the
complaining individual,
requiring the employer to correct immediately any violation or section of
this chapter.
(2)
Upon receiving a second complaint at the department of health for the same or
continued violation by the same
employer, the complaint shall be resolved by notifying the city or
town solicitor, having
jurisdiction over the licensed holder, to initiate, without delay, an action
for
injunction to enforce the
provisions of this chapter, to cause the correction of such violation or
section, and for assessment and
recovery of a civil penalty for such violation.
(e)
The department of health, local fire department, or their designees shall,
while an
establishment is undergoing
otherwise mandated inspections, inspect for compliance with this
chapter.
(f)
An owner, manager, operator, or employee of an establishment regulated by this
chapter shall inform persons
violating this chapter of the appropriate provisions thereof.
(g)
In addition to the remedies provided by the provisions of this section, the
department
of health, aggrieved by the
failure of the owner, operator, manager or other person in control of a
public place or place of
employment to comply with the provisions of this chapter, may apply for
injunctive relief to enforce
those provisions in any court of competent jurisdiction.
23-20.10-10.
Violations and penalties. – (a) An employer who violates this
chapter shall
be liable for a civil penalty as
follows:
(1)
A penalty of two hundred fifty dollars ($250) for the first violation;
(2)
A penalty of five hundred dollars ($500) for the second violation;
(3)
A penalty of one thousand dollars ($1,000) for the third and subsequent
violations;
which
shall be assessed and recovered in a civil action brought by the city or town
solicitor,
having jurisdiction over the
licensed holder, in the city or town municipal court or any court of
competent jurisdiction. Each day
the violation is committed or permitted to continue shall
constitute a separate offense
and shall be punishable as a separate offense. One-half (1/2) of any
penalty assessed and recovered
in an action brought pursuant to this subsection shall be
transferred to the municipality in
which the civil action originated and the other one-half (1/2) of
any penalty assessed and
recovered shall be transferred to the general fund.
(b)
Any fines owed under this chapter shall be paid within thirty (30) days of
judgment
entered. Failure to pay within
thirty (30) days will result in the doubling of the penalty.
(c)
In undertaking the enforcement of this chapter, the state is assuming an
undertaking
only to promote the general
welfare. It is not assuming, nor is it imposing on its officers and
employees, an obligation for
breach of which it is liable in money damages to any person who
claims that this breach
proximately caused injury.
23-20.10-11.
Public education. – The department of health shall engage in a
continuing
program to explain and clarify
the purposes and requirements of this chapter to citizens affected
by it, and to guide owners,
operators and managers in their compliance with it. The program may
include publication of a
brochure for affected businesses and individuals explaining the
provisions of this ordinance.
23-20.10-12.
Governmental agency cooperation. – The state of Rhode Island and its
designees shall annually request
other governmental and educational agencies having facilities
within the state to establish
local operating procedures in cooperation and compliance of this
chapter. This includes urging
all federal, state, municipal and school district agencies to update
their existing smoking control
regulations to be consistent with the current health findings
regarding secondhand smoke.
23-20.10-13.
Other applicable laws. – This chapter shall not be interpreted or
construed
to permit smoking where it is
otherwise restricted by other applicable laws.
23-20.10-14.
Prohibited condition of employment – Smoking by employees outside
course of employment. – (a) No employer or agent of any employer shall
require, as a condition
of employment, that any employee
or prospective employee refrain from smoking or using
tobacco products outside the
course of his or her employment, or otherwise discriminate against
any individual with respect to
his or her compensation, terms, conditions or privileges of
employment for smoking or using
tobacco products outside the course of his or her employment.
Provided, however, that the
following employers shall be exempt from the provisions of this
section: Any employer that is a
nonprofit organization which as one of its primary purposes or
objectives discourages the use
of tobacco products by the general public.
(b)
In any civil action alleging a violation of this section, the court may:
(1)
Award up to three (3) times the actual damages to a prevailing employee or
prospective employee;
(2)
Award court costs to a prevailing employee or prospective employee;
(3)
Afford injunctive relief against any employer who commits or proposes to commit
a
violation of this chapter.
(c)
Nothing contained in this chapter shall be construed to affect any other
provisions of
this title.
23-20.10-15.
Statewide Uniformity (Effective until October 1, 2006). – (a) It is
the
declared policy of this state
that there be uniformity in the application and enforcement of
smoking prohibitions as defined in
this chapter. Any enactment relating to prohibitions in an area
defined in this chapter shall be
by statute as enacted by the general assembly; provided, however,
that the general assembly may by
statute delegate such authority to the cities and towns.
23-20.10-16.
Severability. – If any section, subsection, sentence, clause, phrase
or
portion of this chapter is for
any reason held invalid or unconstitutional by any court of competent
jurisdiction, that portion shall
be deemed a separate, distinct and independent provision and this
holding shall not affect the
validity of the remaining portions of this chapter.
SECTION
3. This act shall take effect on March 1, 2005.
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LC00237/SUB B/2
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