The Mercury News

De Anza students express support for smoke-free campus

- By Anne Gelhaus agelhaus@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

Almost two years after student leaders at De Anza College called for the Cupertino campus to be 100% vape- and smoke-free, onand off-campus groups teamed up to push for the adoption of a formal “no smoking” policy.

Members of Clean Air De Anza, a campus student organizati­on, and Asian Pacific Islander Coalition for

Health Against Tobacco distribute­d informatio­n Jan. 19 about a 100% smoke-free campus policy at De Anza's Hinson Campus Center.

“We are educating students on the benefits of a 100% smoke-free campus, similar to the policy already enacted by a majority of California community colleges and all UC and CSU campuses,” Owen Wise-Pierik, API-CHAT's community engagement coordinato­r, said in a statement. “This policy has been passed by De Anza's

Student Senate and Academic Senate but has yet to be adopted as official policy.”

The De Anza Associated Student Body Senate voted on Feb. 1, 2021, to endorse a resolution calling for the removal of designated smoking areas on the De Anza College campus. The resolution also calls for De Anza to be a 100% smoke- and vapefree campus.

The resolution states that a 2019 survey found 70% of students have been exposed to secondhand cigarette and vape smoke on campus. According to the survey, 29% of students favored a smoke-free campus, and 37% wanted to see just one designated smoking area on the college grounds.

The senate resolution also points out that all UC and CSU campuses are completely smoke-free, compared to only 52% of California Community College campuses in 2021. That number has since increased to 62%. The De Anza Academic

Senate, representi­ng faculty, voted to support a 100% smoke- and tobaccofre­e policy in November 2018. The college's classified staff has to take a similar vote before the policy is adopted on campus.

Wise-Pierik and fellow API-CHAT staffer Tanya Payyappill­y manned the informatio­n table on Jan. 19, handing out informatio­n such as the California College and University Smoke/ Tobacco-Free Policy Report Card, the senate resolution and the De Anza Campus Tobacco Survey Report. They also provided students with informatio­n about quitting vaping and tobacco, offering students “quit kits.”

“Many students walking through the cafeteria at Hinson Campus Center for lunch stopped to speak with the organizers, pick up printed materials and sign up to support the policy and volunteer with future events,” the statement reads.

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