As evidence regarding the health effects of secondhand
smoke has accumulated, there has been growing concern about the impact of
secondhand smoke exposure in multiunit housing settings. These settings
include commercially owned apartments, condominiums, and public housing
facilities, such as housing authorities and subsidized housing. Together
with the workplace, the home is a major source of secondhand smoke exposure,
especially for nonsmokers who live with a smoker (Klepeis 1999; Cal/EPA
2005). Secondhand smoke from one unit in a multiunit housing complex can
seep into an adjoining unit through shared air spaces or shared ventilation
systems.
The main approach for addressing this issue has been
education of landlords and property managers with the goal of having them
implement voluntary no-smoking policies. In some cases, tenants have also
taken legal action to achieve this outcome (Sweda 2004). These policies may
apply to common spaces within the housing complex (such as lobbies,
corridors, stairwells, elevators, laundry rooms, community rooms, and
recreational areas), housing units rented to new tenants, or housing units
rented to both new and existing tenants.
Until recently, landlords and property managers have been
reluctant to restrict smoking in multiunit housing because of concerns about
the legality of doing so and because of the perception that regulating
tenants’ smoking may constitute an intrusion on their privacy. However,
tenants who live in multiunit housing have certain legal obligations and
rights. These obligations and rights in many cases make it possible for
landlords and property managers to restrict or eliminate smoking in
apartments and for nonsmoking tenants to obtain relief from secondhand smoke
seepage from adjoining units. In addition to protecting tenants from
secondhand smoke exposure and avoiding legal action by nonsmokers who
experience secondhand smoke seepage from neighboring units, landlords and
property managers are in some cases motivated by additional factors, such as
reductions in maintenance, cleaning costs, burns, fire danger, and property
insurance premiums. Several organizations are providing information and
technical assistance to landlords to encourage them to implement smoking
restrictions in apartments and condominiums and are working with landlords
to publicize smoke-free rentals through Web site listings (e.g., <http://www.smokefreeapartments.org>;
<http://www.tcsg.org/sfelp/apartment.htm>; <
The Health Consequences of Involuntary Exposure to
Tobacco Smoke Control of Secondhand Smoke Exposure 633
A recent review of legal rulings in this area found that
landlords, condominium associations, and other multiunit property holders
may prohibit smoking for new, and in many cases existing, occupants (Schoenmarklin
2004). Courts do not recognize a legal right to smoke in such dwellings,
whether the dwelling is publicly or privately owned. In addition, residents
of multiunit dwellings have access to common law remedies for stopping
secondhand smoke infiltration, including local safety and health codes. If a
resident of a multiunit dwelling can demonstrate that secondhand smoke
exposure limits a major life activity, the federal Fair Housing Act of 1992
can be used to end the secondhand smoke incursion. Landlords and
building owners can prohibit smoking in apartments and condominiums,
protecting them from lawsuits related to secondhand smoke infiltration (Schoenmarklin
2004).
Similarly, a review of potential legal remedies for
tenants affected by secondhand smoke seepage concluded that state
regulations, such as sanitary codes, provide general language for protecting
the health of residents in multiunit buildings (Kline 2000). Tenants can
also use traditional claims of nuisance, warranties of habitability, and the
right of quiet enjoyment.
The general health protection language of state
regulations, along with evidence of the harmful effects of exposure to
secondhand smoke, gives state agencies authority to regulate secondhand
smoke infiltration between apartments in multiunit dwellings. In states
where regulations do not exist, other legal remedies may be available, many
premised on the existence of a harm to the nonsmoking resident (Kline 2000).
In addition, residents who can prove that they have a disability, including
multiple chemical sensitivity disorder or environmental illness, which is
affected by exposure to secondhand smoke, have recourse under the Fair
Housing Act of 1992 (Schoenmarklin 2004).
In 2005, a housing court jury in Boston, Massachusetts,
ruled that a couple could be evicted from a rented apartment based on other
tenants’ complaints that the secondhand smoke they generated was seeping
into adjoining apartments (Ranalli and Saltzman 2005). The jury found that
the couple’s heavy smoking violated a clause that prohibited "any nuisance;
any offensive noise, odor or fumes; or any hazard to health." They made this
ruling even though the landlord had not included a specific nonsmoking
clause in the lease.
Some government bodies have considered or enacted
policies that restrict smoking in public housing. For example, a housing
authority in Springfield, Illinois, adopted a policy phasing out smoking in
common areas of public housing complexes (Bolinski 2003). Another housing
authority in Auburn, Maine, adopted a policy that bans smoking in all units
except those currently occupied by smokers, with these units gradually
coming under the smoke-free policy as current tenants are replaced (Healthy
Androscoggin 2004). The policy also prohibits smoking in housing authority
buildings and within 25 feet of buildings, including common areas. Finally,
a city council in Thousand Oaks, California, considered prohibiting smoking
in its publicly subsidized apartments, including many or all residential
units (Keating 2003; Lee 2003).
Other government bodies have gone further and taken steps to regulate
smoking in private multi-unit housing settings. For example, several cities
in Alameda County, California, have local ordinances in place requiring that
common areas in multiunit housing be smoke-free (Chen 2005). A Utah law
stipulates that residential unit rental and purchase agreements may prohibit
generation of tobacco smoke (Utah Condominium Ownership Act 2005). Finally,
in 2003, legislation was introduced in the California legislature that would
have regulated smoking in apartments and condominiums (LePage 2003b; Vogel
2003). Specifically, the legislation would have made indoor and outdoor
common areas in these settings smoke-free, would have allowed landlords and
homeowner associations to penalize residents whose secondhand smoke
repeatedly seeps into neighbors’ units, would have allowed tenants to bring
legal actions against neighbors, and would have required all apartment and
condominium units to be smoke-free by January 1, 2006, unless designated by
their owners as smoking units. The sponsor ultimately withdrew the
legislation, citing concerns that had been raised about it (LePage 2003a).
Read the full report:
http://www.surgeongeneral.gov/library/secondhandsmoke/report/