The Niagara Falls Review

McMaster one of nearly 70 campuses that have gone completely smoke-free: report

Universiti­es and colleges banning all forms of smoking

- SHERYL UBELACKER

TORONTO — A growing number of university and college campuses across the country are now fully smoke-free — both indoors and out, says a report by the Canadian Cancer Society released Thursday.

The report says there are now 65 post-secondary institutio­ns that prohibit smoking anywhere on campus, more than double the number in 2017, when 30 colleges and university campuses had implemente­d smoke-free policies. That’s also a dramatic rise from a decade earlier, when only four such institutio­ns had full smoking bans.

Dalhousie University in Halifax was among the first to make its campus 100 per cent smokefree, in 2003.

Those that have followed include the University of Regina, McMaster University in Hamilton and George Brown College in Toronto.

“The trend is accelerati­ng,” Rob Cunningham, senior policy analyst at the Canadian Cancer Society, said from Ottawa.

“We’ve seen the feasibilit­y at various colleges and universiti­es doing it, which then prompts encouragem­ent to nearby institutio­ns to do the same thing.

“That’s positive because not only is there protection from second-hand smoke, but it’s a great motivator for smokers to quit because it’s less convenient.”

Of the universiti­es and colleges that are smoke-free, many have policies that also apply to cannabis, hookah smoking and e-cigarettes. But next month’s legalizati­on of recreation­al marijuana is spurring many post-secondary institutio­ns to strengthen current smoke-free policies and may prod others to bring in their own bans.

“Suddenly, it’s going to be legal to smoke cannabis. There are many underage students,” said Cunningham, noting that depending on the province, those under the age of 18 or 19 are prohibited from smoking pot.

The easiest thing for all of the country’s 260 colleges and universiti­es to do, he said, “is to say you can’t smoke anything anywhere on campus.”

At the University of Toronto, students have long been banned from smoking tobacco in residences and “the same will apply for smoking cannabis,” spokespers­on Elizabeth Church said by email.

The university is reviewing its smoking policy for all three if its campuses, which bans smoking in buildings or “anywhere prohibited by law,” she said.

“Under Ontario’s Cannabis Act, use of cannabis will be banned in all workplaces and public spaces. At U of T, that includes offices, classrooms, libraries, athletic facilities, and campus grounds.”

The Canadian Cancer Society is also concerned about the growing prevalence of vaping, particular­ly among youth — a phenomenon the commission­er of the

U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion characteri­zed this week as an “epidemic of addiction,” mainly driven by flavoured products.

“Most campuses adopting policies are applying them to smoking of anything, including cannabis, and applying it to ecigarette­s as well,” said Cunningham.

“But it is good for policies to be comprehens­ive,” he said.

“One of the reasons for that is that you can consume cannabis through an e-cigarette. That’s part of the context of why there shouldn’t be vaping either on campus.”

 ?? DARREN PITTMAN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Dalhousie is one of 65 campuses that have gone completely smoke-free both indoors and out. The Canadian Cancer Society reports that the number has more than doubled since last year.
DARREN PITTMAN THE CANADIAN PRESS Dalhousie is one of 65 campuses that have gone completely smoke-free both indoors and out. The Canadian Cancer Society reports that the number has more than doubled since last year.

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