[quote name='IAmTheCheapestGamer']
As for smoking, I smoked throughout high school and sporadically a couple of years afterwards and when I was nearly hired by the one local casino I refused a job because they couldn't guarantee me(a non-smoker now) a job ONLY in non-smoking.
The state here(PA) enacted a state wide smoking ban indoors, but then agreed to allow 'exemptions' for those businesses that applied for them. Innumerable bars, restaurants and the casinos all applied for either partial or total exemptions.
To me, if you're going to pass a law banning something, don't be a bunch of pussies and gimp your own law by allowing exemptions. The state of NY banned smoking indoors a while ago and their casinos and businesses don't seem to be hurting.
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Most of New York's casinos are technically on Indian reservations so they are allowed to skirt the laws of New York, such as the smoking ban.
So there IS smoking in the casinos up here.
http://www.senecaniagaracasino.com/
They are mostly on Indian land because there is also a gambling ban in New York, but same thing goes for that too.
[quote name='New York State Constitution']
New York is a state where gambling is specificially prohibited in the State
Constitution. Article 1, Section 9 states:
"No lottery or the sale of lottery tickets, pool-selling, book-making, or any
other kind of gambling, except lotteries operated by the state ... and except
pari-mutuel betting on horse races as may be prescribed by the legislature ...
shall hereafter be authorized or allowed within this state; and the legislature
shall pass appropriate laws to prevent offenses against any of the provisions
of this section."
http://wings.buffalo.edu/law/bclc/web/NewYork/nyconart1.htm
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Now I am not for the government making gambling illegal like this, but damn, enforce the law to everyone if you are going to make a law.
Oh yeah, and New York allows for exemptions on the smoking ban for businesses that apply for one as well.
[quote name='New York State Department of Health']
http://www.nyhealth.gov/regulations/public_health_law/section/1399/
1399-u. Waiver.
- The enforcement officer may grant a waiver from the application of a specific provision of this article, provided that prior to the granting of any such waiver the applicant for a waiver shall establish that:
- Compliance with a specific provision of this article would cause undue financial hardship; or
- Other factors exist which would render compliance unreasonable.
- Every waiver granted shall be subject to such conditions or restrictions as may be necessary to minimize the adverse effects of the waiver upon persons subject to an involuntary exposure to second-hand smoke and to ensure that the waiver is consistent with the general purpose of this article.
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