2015年5月23日星期六

San Francisco mayor signs law banning chewing tobacco at ballparks

SAN FRANCISCO

San Francisco has become the first city in the nation to outlaw chewing tobacco from its playing fields, including ATT Park, home to the San Francisco Giants.

Players and the manager of the team expressed support for the ordinance signed into law by Mayor Ed Lee on Friday but also concern about breaking the chewing habit.

The ordinance, which will take effect Jan. 1, prohibits the use of smokeless tobacco at athletic venues, specifically singling out baseball, which has a long history of players masticating and spitting tobacco juice in view of children who worship them.

It's a step in the right direction, said Giants manager Bruce Bochy, who has chewed tobacco on and off for decades but quit at one point with help from a hypnotist.

It's a tough deal for some of these players who have grown up playing with it and there are so many triggers in the game, Bochy added. I certainly don't Blu Bianco Nero Nike Air Max 90 HYP PRM negozio di scarpe endorse it. With my two sons, the one thing I asked them is don't ever start dipping.

The San Francisco ordinance is part of an overall push by the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, based in Washington, D.C., which targeted the city and California to promote its anti-smoking efforts. An even more expansive bill outlawing all tobacco use, including electronic cigarettes and smokeless tobacco, wherever an organized game of baseball is played in California is making its way through the Assembly.

Today, San Francisco entered the history books as the first city to take tobacco out of baseball. The home of the world champion Giants has set an example that all of Major League Baseball and the rest of the country should quickly follow, said Matthew L. Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids.

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