After the Gov. signed an order ending a public health emergency, which included that provision

New Jersey’s casino smoking ban to be lifted on 4th of July holiday

Governor Phil Murphy indicated he would look favorably on a measure lawmakers are considering to permanently end smoking in New Jersey’s casinos. “I would be very constructive on that,” he said at a coronavirus briefing.
2021-07-01
Reading time 1:41 min
Gov. Phil Murphy indicated he would look favorably on a measure lawmakers are considering to permanently end smoking in New Jersey’s casinos. However, the Casino Association of NJ opposes a permanent smoking ban saying it could cause long-term financial implications.

New Jersey’s ban on smoking in Atlantic City casinos will end Sunday, just in time for the Fourth of July holiday, after one year as part of the pandemic restrictions.

Gov. Phil Murphy said Wednesday that an order he signed ending a public health emergency contained a “sunset” provision winding down the smoking ban within 30 days, which is Sunday, July 4, the Associated Press reports.

While acknowledging gamblers will be free to light up again starting Sunday, the Democratic governor indicated he would look favorably on a measure lawmakers are considering to permanently end smoking in New Jersey’s casinos. “I would be very constructive on that,” he said at a coronavirus briefing, stopping short of saying he would sign the legislation.

The governor’s remarks came two hours after dozens of casino workers and anti-smoking advocates rallied on the Atlantic City boardwalk to call for a permanent smoking ban.

Casinos are exempted from a state law banning most indoor smoking, while an Atlantic City law limits smoking to no more than 25% of the casino floor.

New Jersey has even prohibited smoking on beaches and public parks, which was not lost on many of the rallying casino workers.

Murphy ordered Atlantic City’s casinos to close in March 2020 during the pandemic, and when they reopened 3 1/2 months later, smoking was banned as a public health measure.

Las Vegas casinos also closed in March 2020, and some groups called for a smoking ban when they could reopen less than three months later. But Nevada regulators declined to address the issue.

Onjewel Smith of the group Americans for Nonsmokers’ Rights said the casino workers at greatest risk from smoking “are the mostly Black and brown women, front-line workers. They are the ones putting their lives at risk every day.”

The Casino Association of New Jersey, a trade group, opposes a permanent smoking ban, saying it could cause long-term financial implications.

“Going completely nonsmoking would place Atlantic City casinos at a competitive disadvantage with other nearby casinos that allow smoking,” the group said in a statement. Such a ban would lead to fewer customers, fewer casino jobs, and lower tax revenue, it said.

The casinos say they have spent considerable sums on cleaning and air filtration systems to protect customers, and a considerable amount of gamblers say that smoking is an integral part of their gambling experience.

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