Monday, May 24, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com CLIFF DOUGLAS|I Smoking ban will save lives Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@umich.edu ANDREW LAPIN EDITOR IN CHIEF RYAN KARTJE MANAGING EDITOR ALEX SCHIFF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITI Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All othersigned articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. A right to education Michigan students deserve more than a temporary fix Jt seems that the Michigan State Legislature has adopted a new man- tra: out with the old and in with the new. With the idea of saving the school district money, Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm recently signed a law providing tenured teachers incentives to retire, allowing new, younger teachers commanding lower salaries to take their place. Given the alternatives, this is the preferable course of action for the state to take. But with cuts to education becoming as regular as the seasons over the past decade, legislators must work to guarantee that a solvent, sustainable and successful public education system a right for Michigan children. Michigan recently took a strong step toward protecting our community's health by making virtually all res- taurants, bars, workplaces and public places smoke-free. The governor signed the measure into law because it has been demon- strated, time and again, that smoke- free policies improve indoor air quality, protect the health of non-smokers, reduce emergency hospitalizations for heart attacks, decrease cigarette con- sumption, encourage smokers to quit and change social norms regarding the acceptability of smoking. The facts supporting the adoption of such measures are stark. Worldwide, the tobacco epidemic killed 100 million people in the 20th century and is pro- jected to kill one billion people world- wide in the 21st. In the United States, smoking kills an estimated 443,000 people each year, with secondhand smoke responsible for 50,000 of those deaths, including 1,700 in Michigan. Approximately 8,600,000 people in the United States have chronic ill- nesses related to smoking. And it's no wonder why. Every bil- lowofsmoke fromacigarettecontains hydrogen cyanide, arsenic, benzene and radioactive polonium 210, as well as dozens of other carcinogenic, or cancer-causing, substances. Addi- tives used by the manufacturers cer- tainly don't help, but it is the tobacco itself that is responsible for most of the cancer-causing and toxic effects of cigarettes. In other words, using "organic" or "additive-free" tobacco doesn't help. Many people now know that both smoking and secondhand smoke exposure cause lung cancer and asth- ma attacks, but many areunawarethat secondhand smoke, like direct smok- ing, also causes heart disease, acute respiratory infections, ear problems and sudden infant death syndrome, to name just a few concerns. They don't know that tobacco use causes more deaths than HIV/AIDS, alcohol use, cocaine use, heroincuse, homicides, suicides, motor vehicle crashes anad fires - combined. When it comes to secondhand smoke, some people incorrectlybelieve that openinga window, sittingin a sep- arate area within the same airspace or using a fan protects bystanders from harm. However, a 2006 report by the U.S. Surgeon General concluded that there is no risk-free level of expo- sure. The only genuine protection is 100-percentsmoke-free environments. With passage of the new smoke-free law, Michigan has committed itself to saving lives and protecting its resi- dents. Additionally, it joins the grow- ing number of jurisdictions that have done so. As of the month of March, 24 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico have enacted simi- larly comprehensive smoke-free laws. (An additional 14 states had adopted less comprehensive smoke-free laws that cover some venues.) Well over a dozen countries have also enacted strong smoke-free laws. Even Ireland eliminated smoking in all pubs with overwhelming public support several years ago. The right not to be harmed by the conduct of others is deeply embedded in our culture and in our laws. By con- trast, there is no state or federal con- stitutional right to smoke. As a civil libertarian, it is my personal belief that adults should have the right to make their own, informed decisions about their personal conduct. That prerogative does not extend to engag- ing in activities that place others at risk against their will, whether they areour friends, ourfellowworkers, our children or members of the public. Most people these days are naturally concerned about the health impact of tobacco use, and 70 percent of smokers report that they want to quit. If you are one of them, low-cost (or free) assis- tance is immediately available.You can start by going to www.smokefree.gov, calling 1-800-QUIT-NOW (1-800-784- 8669) or talking to your doctor. Many years ago, I coordinated the national campaign for enactment of the law making all domestic commer- cial airline flights smoke-free. That law has been a huge, popular success for 20 years. Today, one can hardly imagine having to inhale the smoke of fellow passengers on a five-hour, transcontinental flight. I am confident that implementation of Michigan's new law will be met with equal sup- port and appreciation. Cliff Douglas is the Director of the University of Michigan Tobacco Research Network and an adjunct lecturer in tobacco policy at the School of Public Health. 9 0 Last Friday, the state passed a bill that provides incentives for older teachers to retire between July 1 and September 1 of this year, according to AnnArbor. com. Eligible, retiring teach- ers would receive slightly increased pension plans, and those who choose to stay will receive a three-percent pay cut. The bill's proponents hope the retirements will make room for younger, cheaper educators, saving the public school systems up to three billion dollars and alleviating the stress of their budget shortfalls. This bill slaps a Band-Aid on the issue of education funding, but it won't keep the dam from bursting. The plan certainly provides a better solution than cutting teachers or more pro- grams, both of which have been cut nearly to death. While it is troubling that older, experi- enced educators will be pushed out of the education system, they will at least be replaced by younger ones. As a result, basic reading level. students won't have to deal Unfortunately, funding cuts with larger classrooms and less have become a yearly occur- individual attention. This is far rence. Many Michigan residents better than the state's typical and students can't even remem- response to projected shortfalls ber a time when their education - giving school districts less wasn't on the chopping block. A money, forcing them to lay off strong public schooling system critically needed teachers and cut is the great equalizer by which wide swaths of programs. a student is given the tools to Though it is consistently succeed, no matter what class undervalued in the state budget, they hail from. Just like fire and lawmakers should remember police protection, education is a that an educated citizenry is a fundamental right that citizens society's most important asset. should expect from their gov- The industries of the future will ernment, not a privilege. Be it flock to states with well-educat- accomplished with tax increas- ed citizens, and bringing busi- es or spending cuts in other nesses to Michigan is the key to areas, the integrity of Michi- retaining graduates and diver- gan's education system must be sifying the economy away from preserved. the declining manufacturing For now, this plan is the best sector. But right now, that's off the state can do to throw a life to a bad start, as evidenced by raft to its public schools. But recent education statistics from without a long-term solution to Detroit: According to a Detroit Michigan's structural deficit, Free Press report, just 27 per- this plan will just string the sys- cent of Detroit Public School tem along until next year's inev- students scored at or above a itable cuts. If we find they're not doing what they're supposed to do, we'll push them out of the way." - Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar, referring to BP's handling of the Gulf oil spill, as reported by The New York Times on Sunday. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Nicholas Clift, Emma Jeszke, Harsha Panduranga, Joe Stapleton S