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- <text id=93TT0085>
- <title>
- Oct. 25, 1993: Home Smoke-Free Home
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 25, 1993 All The Rage:Angry Young Rockers
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LAW, Page 56
- Home Smoke-Free Home
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Judges warn parents to stub out their cigarettes around the
- children--or risk losing custody
- </p>
- <p>By ANDREA SACHS--With reporting by Elizabeth Brack Mullen/San Francisco
- </p>
- <p> Steven Masone hasn't lived with ex-wife Susan Tanner for seven
- years, but he still can't get over one of her habits: chain
- smoking. It bothers him because it bothers their daughter Elysa,
- 8, who suffers from asthma. Masone, a minister in Stockton,
- California, worries that Tanner is aggravating Elysa's condition
- by lighting up around her. He even got a court order five years
- ago, barring Tanner from smoking in Elysa's presence. But Tanner's
- puffing--and Masone's huffing--continued. Finally, after
- Elysa had an asthma attack this month, a doctor said the child
- would end up in an emergency room if things didn't change. Frantic,
- Masone went back to court. Last week, in a ground-breaking decision,
- a county judge gave temporary custody of Elysa to Masone's mother,
- ruling that Tanner's smoking was endangering her daughter's
- health.
- </p>
- <p> It's not unusual for courts to rescue children from their own
- homes, but their parents are usually charged with gross neglect
- or abuse. Tanner, who plans to appeal, is losing her daughter
- for doing something that is perfectly legal, even if it is frowned
- upon by the Surgeon General. Hers is one of a growing number
- of cases, mainly involving children in divorce custody suits,
- in which judges have prohibited parents from smoking around
- kids who are sensitive to tobacco. Legal Times reported this
- month that courts in at least 11 states have dealt with the
- issue, almost always siding with the nonsmoking parent.
- </p>
- <p> The legal actions herald a major new offensive by America's
- antismoking forces. Their campaign, having stormed through airplane
- cabins, office buildings and restaurants, is moving into the
- home. "Parents exposing their children to secondhand smoke is
- the most common form of child abuse in America," argues attorney
- John F. Banzhaf III, the executive director of Action on Smoking
- and Health (ASH). Banzhaf, a longtime foe of the tobacco industry
- and mastermind of the child-protection strategy, got a major
- boost in January, when an Environmental Protection Agency report
- concluded that secondhand smoke causes 3,000 American adults
- to die of lung cancer each year. The study also blamed proximity
- to smoking for hundreds of thousands of cases of childhood respiratory
- illnesses, such as bronchitis, pneumonia and asthma.
- </p>
- <p> The tobacco industry, which sued the EPA over the report, disputes
- the court judgments against smoking parents, arguing that the
- case against secondhand smoke hasn't been proved. In fact, some
- prominent scientists, including epidemiology expert Alvan Feinstein
- of the Yale medical school, believe the EPA may have overstated
- the evidence in its study. Nonetheless, most health researchers
- agree it is prudent to keep children away from smoke as much
- as possible.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the scientific conclusions, Bill Wordham, a spokesman
- for the Tobacco Institute trade group, contends that the court
- cases are an invasion of privacy: "We have to ask ourselves
- where this would stop. Is a parent who habitually takes a child
- to MacDonald's or otherwise feeds that child unhealthy food
- any less deserving of custody? What about a parent who allows
- his child to watch long hours of television?" Some nonindustry
- observers agree, conjuring up visions of government antismoking
- patrols. Says Thomas Harvey Holt, a Visiting Fellow at the Capital
- Research Center in Washington: "Smokers soon may find social-services
- agents on their doorsteps, asking `May I come in and make sure
- there are no cigarettes, cigars or pipes on your premises?'
- " Counters ASH's Banzhaf: "Nobody is telling parents they can't
- smoke. We're simply saying they can't smoke around their children.
- This is no different from protecting children from lead-based
- paint or other risks in the home."
- </p>
- <p> Legal experts predict a continued surge in suits against smoking
- parents. If that happens, Joseph LaMacchia, founder of Parents
- Against Second-Hand Smoke in Watertown, Massachusetts, will
- take some of the credit. LaMacchia teaches nonsmoking parents
- how to build such cases. In a 40-page booklet that costs $6,
- he advises parents to keep a log of their children's physical
- problems and have their urine or saliva tested to prove overexposure
- to smoke.
- </p>
- <p> Banzhaf is looking forward to the day when it won't take a custody
- battle to defend children against secondhand smoke. "I am certainly
- not suggesting that every time a parent lights up in the same
- room, we're going to cry child abuse," he says. "But the same
- protection will eventually be extended to children in ongoing
- marriages through child-neglect proceedings." Most public health
- officials share Banzhaf's exasperation. Says Dr. Ronald Davis,
- medical director of the Michigan public health department: "When
- I see parents smoking around their kids, I have the same reaction
- as I do toward parents with a carful of kids who aren't wearing
- seat belts: `What are you doing, people?' " As judges get involved,
- more parents are likely to be asking themselves that very question.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-