Source: Health Policy Institute of Ohio
Smoking will be prohibited in public housing residences nationwide under a federal rule announced last week (Source: “U.S. will Ban Smoking in Public Housing Nationwide,” New York Times, November 30, 2016).
Officials with the Department of Housing and Urban Development said that the rule would take effect early next year, but that public housing agencies would have a year and a half to put smoke-free policies in place. The rule will affect more than 1.2 million households, the officials said, although some 200,000 homes already come under smoking bans adopted voluntarily by hundreds of public housing agencies around the country.
Anti-smoking advocates consider smoke-free housing the latest major front in the long-running campaign to curb exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke. The rule covering public housing forbids cigarettes, cigars, pipes and, hookahs (or water pipes) — but not electronic cigarettes — from being smoked in all living units, indoor common areas, administrative offices, and all outdoor areas within 25 feet of housing and office buildings.