News

Actions

Alabama could soon make it illegal for you to smoke in the car if a child is present

Posted at 3:10 PM, Feb 01, 2018
and last updated 2018-02-01 15:10:30-05

(CNN) — A bill that would ban smokers from lighting up in the car if there’s a minor inside is one step closer to becoming law in Alabama.

The state House passed HB 26 41-30 this week. The Senate votes on it next.

If it becomes law, the bill will make it illegal to smoke a tobacco product if anyone under 19 is in the car, whether the vehicle is moving or parked. Anyone caught breaking the law will be fined $100.

“We aren’t saying you can’t smoke, and we aren’t saying what to do with your body,” state Rep. Rolanda Hollis said. “We just want to look out more for the kids.”

The Democratic lawmaker, who introduced the bill, said she got the idea after her husband began smoking during a date night.

“If I can barely breathe, I’m sure children can barely breathe,” she said.

She began thinking of her 17-year-old son and all the other children who don’t have the same choice as an adult does. They can’t simply get out of a car if they want to, she said.

Her husband, she said, doesn’t smoke in the car anymore.

The effects of smoking on children

There’s a growing body of evidence that children’s exposure to smoke increases their risk of heart disease as an adult.

Researchers in a study published in the journal Circulation found that simply having a parent who smoked but tried to limit their child’s exposure to their smoke increased a child’s risk of heart disease as an adult by nearly twice that of a child whose parents didn’t smoke at all.

For kids whose parents smoked in front of them and didn’t really limit their exposure, their risk for heart disease was four times higher than for children of non-smokers.

Children are more susceptible to the harmful effects because their lungs are smaller, they breathe faster, and they have less-developed immune systems.

The British Lung Foundation says more than 80% of secondhand smoke contains cancer-causing toxins, which are more concentrated in the confines of a car.

States with similar laws

If the bill becomes law, Alabama will join several other states with similar laws. Among them are California, Maine, Oregon and Virginia. Puerto Rico has also passed a similar law. Each state has a different age range for a minor.

Similar laws also exist in many countries, including the UK, Australia and a number of jurisdictions in Canada.