Las Vegas Review-Journal

Workers sue for indoor smoke ban

Law exempts Atlantic City casinos

- By Wayne Parry The Associated Press

Frustrated at having unsuccessf­ully agitated for over three years to get lawmakers to ban smoking in Atlantic City casinos, workers on Friday tried a new tactic. They filed a lawsuit to try to overturn a law that leaves casino workers as the only ones not covered by the protection­s of a clean workplace air act.

The United Auto Workers, which represents workers at the Bally’s, Caesars and Tropicana casinos, and a group of casino workers opposed to smoking in the gambling halls, filed a lawsuit in state Superior

Court challengin­g New Jersey’s indoor clean air law.

Enacted 18 years ago, the law bans smoking in virtually all indoor workplaces — except casinos.

The litigation seeks to have that exemption declared unconstitu­tional on several grounds, including equal protection under the law.

At a rally outside the courthouse where the litigation was filed, workers said they are employing new tactics to ban smoking in the casinos after thus far failing to convince legislator­s to do it.

“Today, we get off our knees and stand up!” shouted Lamont White, a dealer at the Borgata casino and one of the leaders of the employee anti-smoking movement. “We offered them the carrot, and now they get the stick!”

Whether to ban smoking is one of the most controvers­ial issues not only in Atlantic City casinos, but in other states where workers have expressed concern about secondhand smoke. They are waging similar campaigns in Rhode Island, Pennsylvan­ia, Kansas and Virginia

Ray Jensen Jr., assistant director of the local UAW office, said the venue for the fight has shifted.

“If the legislator­s in Trenton won’t do their jobs, we’re going to take the decision out of their hands and into a courtroom,” he said.

Mark Giannanton­io, president of the Casino Associatio­n of New Jersey and of Resorts casino, declined comment on the lawsuit. But the associatio­n opposes a smoking ban, saying that to do so would put Atlantic City at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge with neighborin­g states that still allow smoking.

The lawsuit names Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy, whose office did not immediatel­y return a message seeking comment, and the state’s acting health commission­er. Murphy has said he will sign a smoking ban if the Legislatur­e passes one.

Earlier in the week, Donna Decaprio, president of Local 54 of the Unite Here casino workers union, said Atlantic City’s core business — winnings from in-person gamblers — continues to struggle. She warned lawmakers against doing anything to make the already serious problem worse.

The union opposes a smoking ban, saying it will cost revenue and jobs and possible force one or more casinos to close.

Only three of the nine casinos are winning more from in-person gamblers now than they did before the COVID-19 pandemic hit in 2020. Unlike in-person winnings, money won from online gambling or sports betting must be shared with outside parties and is not solely for the casinos to keep.

“Alarm bells should be ringing in Atlantic City and in Trenton as to both the short-term and long-term negative economic trends,” she said. “Representa­tives in the New Jersey Legislatur­e must understand the perilous economic situation at hand for my members, and indeed all workers in Atlantic City.”

 ?? Wayne Parry The Associated Press ?? Atlantic City casino workers hold signs during a rally in Trenton N.J., on Friday after filing a lawsuit challengin­g New Jersey’s clean indoor air law that exempts casino workers.
Wayne Parry The Associated Press Atlantic City casino workers hold signs during a rally in Trenton N.J., on Friday after filing a lawsuit challengin­g New Jersey’s clean indoor air law that exempts casino workers.

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