Source: http://snus-news.blogspot.com/2010/01/ohio-legacy-foundation-asks-supreme.html
Timestamp: 2020-08-14 18:10:14
Document Index: 282499710

Matched Legal Cases: ['ART_01', 'ART_01', 'ART_01', 'in fine', 'in fine', 'ART_10', 'in fine']

Snus News & Other Tobacco Products: OHIO - Legacy Foundation asks Supreme Court to hear appeal..
OHIO - Legacy Foundation asks Supreme Court to hear appeal..
January 26, 2010 - Today, January 21st the Legacy(SM) -- a national public health foundation devoted to tobacco cessation and prevention -- asked the Ohio Supreme Court to hear the appeal in its case seeking to preserve tobacco funds and the life-saving tobacco control programs they support in Ohio. Legacy created as a result of the Master Settlement Agreement (MSA), stepped forward in April 2008 to help safeguard the tobacco settlement dollars Ohio had set aside for tobacco control.
Today's action came in response to Legacy's deep disappointment in the New Year's Eve decision of the Ohio Court of Appeals of Franklin County, Tenth Appellate District. In that ruling, the appeals court reversed a lower court's order permanently enjoining [for a court to order that someone either do a specific act, cease a course of conduct or be prohibited from committing a certain act] the State from dissolving the Tobacco Use Prevention and Control Endowment Fund. (OHIO - appeals court rules on December 31, 2009 the state can use money set aside for tobacco prevention..; A judge ruled Tuesday, August 11, 2009 that state officials had no authority to divert $230 million from an anti-tobacco fund to balance the recently approved state budget.)
Former Ohio Attorney General Betty Montgomery and Ohio and National Public Health Leaders File Friend of the Court Briefs in Support of the Appeal. Ohio and national public health organizations that have urged the court to hear the appeal. A third brief was filed by the Citizen's Commission to Protect the Truth which is comprised of former Surgeons General, Directors of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and U.S. Secretaries of Health and Human Services/ Health, Education and Welfare.
Research shows that tobacco takes an enormous toll on Ohio - both in lives lost and dollars spent. Ohio's smoking rate is 20.1 percent, just below the national average of 20.6 percent, thanks in large measure to the work of the Ohio Tobacco Use Prevention and Control Endowment Fund. Smoking costs Ohio more than $4 billion in annual health care costs and another $4.7 billion annually in smoking-related productivity loss (in 2004 dollars). A 2007 report by Legacy found that Ohio's Medicaid system could save $550 million within five years if all Medicaid beneficiaries who smoke, quit.
See reference for a TIMELINE of activity related to the Ohio tobacco funding dispute.
Reference: Legacy(SM) Files Appeal Today to Ohio Supreme Court, Source: Legacy Foundation, 1/21/2010.
Posted by tobaccowatch.org Tuesday, January 26, 2010 at 8:51 AM
Perhaps by reading the following storys provided by the links furnished you might see the real story here about this issue.
http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/editorials/stories/2010/01/10/healton.ART_ART_01-10-10_G5_M5G8C6J.html?sid=101
http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/editorials/stories/2010/01/16/Hossfeld_SAT_ART_01-16-10_A9_AHGA91D.html?sid=101
http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/editorials/stories/2010/01/16/Whyde__SAT_ART_01-16-10_A9_FNGAIS2.html?sid=101
http://blog.dispatch.com/dailybriefing/2010/02/antismoking_group_is_generous.shtml
http://www.leagle.com/unsecure/page.htm?shortname=inohco20091231767
In the comment section of http://blog.dispatch.com/dailybriefing/2010/02/antismoking_group_is_generous.shtml it is documented the games that the OTPF played.
Ohios failure.
Stiver said "nobody ever pays" the fines. But Sara Morman, a spokeswoman for the state Health Department, said Ohio has collected $473,000 of the $1.1 million in fines so far, and "we are actively pursuing those outstanding fines." How much has this cost?
http://www.dispatchpolitics.com/live/content/local_news/stories/2010/02/22/copy/state-smoking-ban-has-cost-2-million.html?sid=101
The state has spent $3.2 million so far to identify businesses that are violating the smoking ban, to look for infractions and to process them through the court system, according to information released by the Ohio Department of Health to state Sen. Bill Seitz, a critic of the smoking ban.
Health authorities have issued $1.2 million in fines and collected about $400,000, the health department said.
Now look at this! http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/local_news/stories/2009/10/16/SMOKE.ART_ART_10-16-09_B3_4LFCSGM.html
In August, the Ohio Department of Health sued two bars, including Zeno's in Columbus, for repeatedly violating the ban. Zeno's said the state's enforcement is inconsistent and discriminatory. The suit is pending.
Newer news http://www.dispatchpolitics.com/live/content/local_news/stories/2010/02/26/copy/judge-punish-smokers-not-bars.html?sid=101
Representatives of the bar industry said that strategy probably will backfire and could result in the state having to refund more fines.
Maurice Thompson, a lawyer for the 1851 Center for Constitutional Law, which represented Zeno's, said the ruling will spare the Columbus bar $30,000 in fines and might invalidate hundreds of thousands of dollars in penalties against other establishments.
Moreover, Thompson said, anti-smoking enforcers won't be able to automatically attribute any violations to a bar or restaurant.
"The Department of Health is going to have to do something that they have never done before: They're going to have to investigate the site before they fine," Thompson said. "They're going to have to talk to the individual smoker."
The ban, which passed in a 2006 statewide vote, provides for $100 fines against people who smoke in bars, restaurants, workplaces and other smoke-free establishments.
But enforcers haven't fined individuals because they can't issue a citation unless they both observe the person smoking and that person disobeyed orders from a bartender to cease or leave, Morman said.
"The way the law was set up makes it difficult to cite individuals," she said.