This chapter’s purposes are to:
A. Protect
the public health, safety, and general welfare by prohibiting smoking
in public places and in the common areas of multifamily rental housing
under circumstances where one or more persons will be exposed to secondhand
smoke;
B. Ensure
a cleaner and more hygienic environment for the city, its residents,
and its natural resources;
C. Strike
a reasonable balance between the needs of persons who smoke and the
needs of non-smokers, including children, to breathe smoke-free air,
by recognizing the threat to public health and the environment that
smoking causes, and by acknowledging that, when these needs conflict,
the need to breath smoke-free air must prevail; and
D. Recognize
the right of city residents, workers, and visitors to be free from
unwelcome secondhand smoke.
(Ord. 5464 § 2, 2005; Ord. 5628 § 1, 2008)
The city council finds, determines, and declares that:
A. Extensive
medical and scientific research confirms that tobacco smoke is harmful
to smokers and non-smokers alike, triggering eye, nose, throat, and
sinus irritation; hastening lung disease, including emphysema; and
causing heart disease and lung cancer.
B. In 1992,
the United States Surgeon General reported that involuntary smoking
— by inhaling “secondhand smoke” (also called “environmental
tobacco smoke”)— can cause lung cancer in healthy nonsmokers
and poses a significant public health hazard.
C. In 2006,
the United States Surgeon General concluded that:
1. A
risk-free level of exposure to secondhand smoke does not exist; and
2. Neither
separating smokers from non-smokers nor installing ventilation systems
effectively eliminates secondhand smoke.
D. The
United States Environmental Protection Agency has classified secondhand
smoke as a group A carcinogen, the most dangerous class of carcinogen.
E. The
United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (“CDC”)
estimates that secondhand smoke causes 3,000 lung cancer deaths per
year among adult non-smokers in the United States. Additionally, the
California Environmental Protection Agency has concluded that secondhand
smoke cause’s coronary heart disease in non-smokers.
F. The
California Air Resources Board has put secondhand smoke in the same
category as the most toxic automotive and industrial air pollutants
by categorizing it as a toxic air contaminant for which no safe level
of exposure exists.
G. Secondhand
smoke is especially hazardous to particular groups, including those
with chronic health problems, the elderly, and children.
H. The
CDC has found that secondhand smoke causes children to suffer from
lower respiratory tract illness, such as bronchitis and pneumonia;
exacerbates childhood asthma; and increases the risk of acute chronic
middle ear infection in children.
I. Inside
buildings, tobacco smoke contributes significantly to indoor air pollution.
J. The
aesthetic impacts and odors of secondhand smoke pose a nuisance and
annoyance to nonsmokers when in close proximity to people who are
smoking.
K. Most
Californians do not smoke and a majority favors limitations on smoking
in multiunit rental housing, as evidenced by the following statistics:
1. Eighty-six
percent of Californians are nonsmokers;
2. Seventy-eight
percent of California voters support a law requiring apartment buildings
to offer nonsmoking sections, where all the apartments, balconies,
and patios in that section were smoke-free, similar to the way that
hotels offer nonsmoking floors;
3. Seventy-four
percent of California voters favor having smoke-free sections in apartment
buildings so that 50% of the apartments would be nonsmoking; and
4. Seventy
percent of California voters believe that a prospective tenant moving
into an apartment should be told if a tenant next door smokes.
L. Smoking
in parks or recreational facilities endangers children and other users
by exposing them to secondhand smoke.
M. Within
parks and recreational facilities, discarded cigarette and cigar butts
(which do not readily decompose) pose a particularly hazardous risk
to small children who sometimes ingest the butt or who handle it while
it is still hot.
N. Discarding
a lighted cigarette or cigar butt onto the ground in a city park or
recreational facility not only has the potential to cause a fire,
but also is a major source of litter and pollution, by washing into
storm drains and then ultimately contaminating the ocean.
O. Under
the city’s stormwater management permit from the regional water
quality control board, Glendale must remove from its storm drains
litter measuring as small as five millimeters, and because most cigarette
or cigar butts exceed that size, the city must eliminate cigarette
or cigar butts from its storm drains.
P. The
city of Glendale is committed to keeping its housing and public spaces
safe, healthy, and pleasant for everyone.
Q. In outdoor
dining areas; outdoor service areas; public transit vehicles, stations,
and stops; outdoor gathering and event areas; indoor and outdoor shopping
areas and centers; elevators; indoor and outdoor common areas of multiunit
rental housing and residential condominium complexes; in proximity
to entrances/exits, windows, and vents of buildings open to the public;
and on balconies and patios of multiunit rental housing and residential
condominium units, smoking endangers the health of nonsmokers who
are in the same area.
R. Neither
the United States Constitution nor the California Constitution gives
a person a constitutional right to smoke.
S. Therefore,
not only restricting smoking on balconies and patios of multiunit
rental housing and residential condominium units, in public spaces
such as buildings, common areas of multiunit rental housing and residential
condominium complexes, parks and recreational facilities, and at other
locations open to the public, but also regulating disposal of cigarettes,
cigars, and tobacco products are necessary acts to protect the health,
safety, and welfare of Glendale residents, workers, and visitors.
(Ord. 5464 § 2, 2005; Ord. 5628 § 2, 2008; Ord. 5686 § 1, 2010)
For the purpose of this chapter, the following terms are defined
as follows:
“Adult day care facility”
means an establishment or facility that:
2.
Provides non-medical care to a person who is 18 years of age
or older and in need of personal services, supervision, or assistance
essential for:
a.
Sustaining the activities of daily living; or
b.
Protecting the individual on less than a 24 hour basis.
“Air intake vent”:
1.
Means an opening into a building or structure that draws air
from outside as part of the building’s or structure’s
ventilation system.
2.
Does not include an entrance/exit, or a window.
“Banquet hall”
has the same meaning as that term is defined in Section
30.70.030 of this code, or any successor legislation.
“Bar”:
1.
Means an establishment:
a.
That is devoted to serving an alcoholic beverage for consumption,
on the premises, by one or more customers or guests; and
b.
Whose annual gross income from serving food equals 25% or less
of its total annual gross income, which the establishment:
i.
Derives from all combined revenue sources (including, but, not
limited to, alcoholic beverage, non-alcoholic beverage, food, and
merchandise sales); and
ii.
Demonstrates in a financial statement that a certified public
accountant has certified as true and correct; and
c.
Has a current and valid zoning use certificate or certificate
of use and occupancy from the city.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
3.
Does not include a restaurant’s dining area.
“Brand Boulevard Chess Park”
means the site, including the chess tables, benches, five
light towers, and pedestrian passageway, located at 227 North Brand
Boulevard.
“Business”
means an entity, however organized, whether a sole proprietorship,
partnership, joint venture, corporation, association, or otherwise,
that:
1.
Is formed for a profit-making purpose; or
“Caretaker’s residence”
has the same meaning as the term “caretaker’s residences,” which is defined in Section
30.70.040 of this code, or any successor legislation.
“Certificate of occupancy”
means the document issued by the city’s building official,
or a designee, in accordance with the Glendale Building and Safety
Code, or any successor legislation, and other applicable codes that
allow a structure to be legally occupied for its intended use.
“Child care facility”
means an establishment or facility that:
2.
Provides non-medical care to a person who is less than 18 years
of age and in need of personal services, supervision, or assistance
essential for:
a.
Sustaining the activities of daily living, or
b.
Protecting the individual on less than a 24 hour basis.
“Cigar”:
1.
Means a roll of tobacco that is:
a.
Intended to be burned or heated under ordinary conditions of
use; and
b.
Wrapped in, or has a cover made of, leaf tobacco or another
substance containing tobacco.
2.
Does not include a roll of tobacco wrapped in a substance which,
because of its appearance, the type of tobacco used in the filler,
or its packaging and labeling, is likely to be offered to, or purchased
by, consumers as a cigarette.
“Cigarette”
means a roll of tobacco or another substance, including weed,
filler, or plant of any kind, that is:
1.
Intended to be burned or heated under ordinary conditions of
use; and
2.
Wrapped in, or has a cover made of, paper or another material.
“City building or facility
”:
1.
Means an area, location, place, site, property, lot, building,
structure, facility, or complex that the city or the Glendale Successor
Agency owns, controls, operates, occupies, manages, or maintains.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
b.
An elevator, escalator, stairway, or ramp;
c.
A courtyard, plaza, lobby, atrium, patio, or landscaped area;
d.
A walkway, corridor, or hallway;
e.
A seating, waiting, or reception area;
f.
A meeting or conference room, community room, or auditorium;
g.
An employee’s office or work cubicle;
h.
An employee’s break room or eating area;
i.
A cafeteria or vending machine area;
j.
A fire or utility access road;
k.
A radio transmission or equipment site;
l.
A repair or service facility, or maintenance yard;
m.
A monument or memorial area;
p.
Civic center, including:
i.
City Hall building, community services building, facilities
services trailer, general services building, Howard sub-station building,
municipal services building, or Perkins building,
ii.
Civic center parking structure, or a standalone parking lot
or structure,
iii.
Parcher Plaza, Perkins Plaza, or Civic Center War Memorial,
or
iv.
A walkway or landscaped area;
q.
Fire department station, administrative office, or training
center (except when smoking is an integral part of a training exercise);
r.
Glendale Water and Power:
i.
Power plant, electrical sub-station, control house, or utility
operations center, or
ii.
Water distribution or treatment plant, sewage treatment plant,
pump house, tank, or reservoir;
s.
Police department, police parking structure, sub-station, shooting
range, or heliport;
t.
Public works corporate yard, environmental management center,
or integrated waste management facility;
w.
Youth and family services office.
“City golf course”
means a golf course that the city or the Glendale Successor
Agency owns, controls, operates, occupies, manages, or maintains.
“City park”:
1.
Means a mini-park, neighborhood park, community park, regional
park, bikeway, trail, greenbelt, developed or undeveloped parkland,
open space land, open space parcel, or open space area that the city
or the Glendale Successor Agency owns, controls, operates, occupies,
manages, or maintains.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
a.
All buildings, structures, facilities, fields, or equipment
within the city’s boundaries;
b.
The central library, arts and culture’s outdoor grounds;
and
c.
The Brand Boulevard Chess Park.
“City parking lot or structure”
means a parking lot or structure that the city or the Glendale
Successor Agency owns, controls, operates, occupies, manages, or maintains.
“City public transportation vehicle”:
1.
Means:
a.
A vehicle for public transit that the city, or a contractor
on the city’s behalf, owns, controls, operates, rents, leases,
or maintains; or
b.
A taxicab or other vehicle for hire that Chapter
5.84 of this code, or any successor legislation, governs.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
“City vehicle”
means a vehicle that:
1.
The city owns, leases, or rents; and
2.
A city employee or a person drives, operates, or has control
over it.
“Common area”:
1.
Means an indoor area, or outdoor area, or both, at any one or
more of the following places:
a.
A shopping mall that is accessible to and usable by an occupant
or customer of more than one retail establishment;
b.
A boardinghouse or lodging house, dormitory or residence hall,
or multi-unit rental housing that is accessible to and usable by a
resident or tenant of more than one room or unit; or
c.
A residential condominium complex that is accessible to and
usable by an owner of more than one unit.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
a.
At a shopping mall:
ii.
An elevator, escalator, or stairway;
iii.
A courtyard, plaza, lobby, atrium, or patio;
iv.
A walkway, corridor, or hallway;
v.
A seating, waiting, or reception area;
vi.
A restaurant or eating area;
viii.
A parking lot or structure.
b.
At a boardinghouse or lodging house, dormitory or residence
hall, multi-unit rental housing, or residential condominium complex:
ii.
An elevator, escalator, or stairway;
iii.
A courtyard, plaza, lobby, lounge, or atrium;
iv.
A walkway, corridor, or hallway;
v.
A seating, waiting, or reception area;
xi.
A recreation or game room;
xiii.
A television, media, or computer room;
xiv.
A common cooking, or eating area;
xv.
A swimming pool, spa, sauna, or pool deck; or
xvi.
A parking lot or structure.
“Community center”
has the same meaning as the term “community centers,” which is defined in Section
30.70.040 of this code, or any successor legislation.
“Community garden”
has the same meaning as the term “community gardens,” which is defined in Section
30.70.040 of this code, or any successor legislation.
“Convention center”
has the same meaning as the term “convention centers,” which is defined in Section
30.70.040 of this code, or any successor legislation.
“Dormitory” or “residence hall”:
1.
Means a room or a unit in a building, or space in a building,
that:
a.
A school, college, university, or non-profit entity owns, controls,
operates, occupies, manages, or maintains; and
b.
Provides:
i.
Permanent provisions for living and sleeping for one or more:
(A)
Students of a school, college, or university, or
ii.
Single or multiple occupancy accommodations;
iii.
A bathroom or shared bathroom facilities; and
iv.
A cafeteria, common kitchen, or communal dining area; or
2.
Does not include:
a.
A boardinghouse or lodging house;
b.
A domestic violence shelter;
f.
A retirement or rest home.
“Employee”
means one or more persons who:
1.
Are employed or retained by an employer:
a.
In consideration for direct or indirect monetary wages or profit;
or
b.
As an independent contractor; or
2.
Volunteer their services for an employer or a non-profit entity.
“Employer”
means a person or a non-profit entity that employs or retains
the services of one or more employees.
“Enclosed”:
1.
Means:
a.
A covered or partially covered area having more than 50% of
its perimeter area walled in or otherwise closed to the outside, regardless
of material, including, for example, a covered porch with more than
two walls; or
b.
A space open to the sky (“uncovered”) having more
than 75% of its perimeter area walled in or otherwise closed to the
outside including, for example, a courtyard.
2.
Does not include an uncovered space of 5,000 square feet or
more, including, for example, a field in an open-air arena.
3.
For the purpose of this definition, a fence, wall, or railing
that is 42 inches or less in height is not considered a “wall”
and is not used to determine whether an area is “walled in.”
“Entrance/exit”
means a doorway or opening, for ingress, or egress, or both,
at or within any one or more of the following areas, locations, places,
or sites, including, but not limited to:
1.
A building, room, structure, facility, or complex;
2.
A public transit station or stop;
8.
An enclosed public place;
9.
A non-enclosed public place;
10.
Multi-unit rental housing;
11.
A residential condominium complex;
13.
A street, sidewalk, walkway, or parking lot or structure.
“Gas station”
has the same meaning as the term “gas stations,” which is defined in Section
30.70.080 of this code, or any successor legislation.
“Golf course”:
1.
Means an outdoor area of land with natural turf that:
a.
Is designed and used for playing or practicing the game of golf;
and
b.
Contains a series of nine or more separate holes, each one having
a tee, fairway, rough, out-of-bounds area, putting green, and occasionally,
one or more natural or artificial hazards.
2.
Includes a practice green, driving range, or chip-and-putt course.
3.
Does not include a miniature golf course.
“Gym” or “health club”
has the same meaning as the term “gyms and health clubs,” which is defined in Section
30.70.080 of this code, or any successor legislation.
“Health care or medical care facility”:
1.
Means:
a.
A clinic or a health facility that is licensed, or is exempt
from licensure, under California
Health and Safety Code Sections 1204,
1206, and 1250, or any successor legislation.
b.
A facility or place where a physician, surgeon, chiropractor,
podiatrist, osteopath, acupuncturist, physical therapist, or another
person licensed under California’s Medical Practice Act (Business
and Professions Code, Chapter 5, Sections 2000 to 2521, or any successor
legislation) provides diagnosis, care, prevention, or treatment of
human illness, whether physical or mental.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
e.
A physical therapy facility;
j.
An infertility treatment center; or
k.
An out-patient care facility.
“Hotel” or “motel”:
1.
Has the same meaning as that term is defined in Section
30.70.090 of this code, or any successor legislation.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
a.
A registration or check-out area;
b.
A courtyard, plaza, lobby, lounge, or atrium; or
c.
A seating, waiting, or reception area.
“House of worship”:
1.
Means:
a.
A building or structure, including its grounds, on one contiguous
property:
i.
That is used primarily and regularly by an association of persons
for:
(A)
The advancement of a religion; and
(B)
The conduct of religious worship, services, rites, or education;
and
ii.
Whose governing or operating entity:
(A)
Is exempt from taxation under the United States Internal Revenue
Code’s provisions;
(B)
Has established its organization’s permanent existence
and continuity; and
(C)
Has a current and valid:
(1)
Zoning use certificate from the city, issued for the classification “places of worship,” which is defined in Section
30.70.170 of this code, or any successor legislation, or
(2)
Certificate of use and occupancy from the city, as a “church”
or issued for the classification “places of worship”;
or
(D)
Is entitled to a zoning use certificate from the city, issued
for the classification “places of worship.”
2.
Includes, but is not limited to, other areas or places within
the premises:
a.
A garden, shrine, or sanctuary;
h.
An administrative office.
“International ‘No Smoking’ symbol”
means the pictorial representation of a burning cigarette
inside a red circle and crossed by a red bar, all of which contrasts
against the background material.
“Landlord”
means a person, other than a sublessor, who:
1.
Owns real property leased as residential property;
2.
Lets residential property; or
“Legible”
means, in the context of a “No Smoking” sign
and “Smoking Permitted” sign, capable of being read, without
visual aid, by a person with normal visual acuity who views the sign
at a distance of five feet away from it.
“Library”
has the same meaning as the term “libraries,” which is defined in Section
30.70.130 of this code, or any successor legislation.
“Lot area”
has the same meaning as that term is defined in Section
30.70.130 of this code, or any successor legislation.
“Monument” or “memorial area”
means an enclosed or non-enclosed area, open to the general
public, where a permanently installed or affixed object, including,
but not limited to, a statue, bust, sculpture, work of art, portrait,
photograph, sign, tablet, or plaque, commemorates, honors, or pays
tribute to one or more persons or an event.
“Motion picture theater”:
1.
Means an establishment, regardless of what it is formally called,
whether a movie theater, cinema, screening room, picture or movie
house, picture or movie palace, adult movie theater, drive-in theater,
multiplex, megaplex, cineplex, multi-screen cinema, or otherwise:
a.
With one or more auditoriums, halls, rooms, areas, or places
that are designed and used for exhibiting a motion picture, or a visual
or audiovisual work, regardless of:
i.
Its length or content, or
ii.
The technology used to record, store, distribute, transmit,
or exhibit it;
b.
That is open to the general public, or is closed to the public
for a private function; and
c.
Has a current and valid zoning use certificate or certificate
of use and occupancy from the city.
2.
Does not include a motion picture exhibited in a private residence,
such as a home theater.
“Multi-unit rental housing”:
1.
Means one or more buildings on the same lot that contain two
or more units rented, or available for rent, which:
a.
Provide complete, independent living facilities, including permanent
provisions for living, sleeping, eating, cooking, and sanitation;
and
b.
The building’s landlord does not occupy.
2.
Does not include a residential condominium complex.
“Museum”
has the same meaning as the term “museums,” which is defined in Section
30.70.140 of this code, or any successor legislation.
“Nightclub”
has the same meaning as the term “nightclubs,” which is defined in Section
30.70.150 of this code, or any successor legislation.
“‘No Smoking’ sign”
means a sign or placard that:
1.
Indicates to the person viewing it that smoking, as defined
in this chapter, is prohibited; and
2.
Meets the requirements of Section
8.52.210(D) of this chapter.
“Non-enclosed”:
1.
Means a predominantly outdoor area that does not meet this chapter’s
definition of “enclosed.”
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
d.
A public transit station or stop; or
“Non-profit entity”:
1.
Means an entity, or a corporation, unincorporated association,
or other entity however organized, that is exempt from taxation under
the United States Internal Revenue Code’s provisions, and whose:
a.
Purpose or objective is primarily benevolent, charitable, religious,
philanthropic, educational, intellectual, athletic, fraternal, character-building,
political, or social; and
b.
Net proceeds from its operations are committed to promoting
the entity’s objectives or purposes, rather than to achieving
private gain.
2.
Does not include a public entity.
“Office”
has the same meaning as that term is defined in Section
30.70.160 of this code, or any successor legislation.
“Outdoor balcony” or “patio”:
1.
Means an outdoor area or space that is:
a.
Attached or unattached to:
i.
A smoking unit or non-smoking unit in multi-unit rental housing,
or
ii.
A residential condominium unit;
b.
At ground level or raised above the ground;
c.
Open to the air at all times; and
d.
Either:
i.
With a roof or overhead covering, and with not more than two
walls or side coverings; or
ii.
Without a roof or overhead covering, regardless of the number
of walls or side coverings.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to, a deck or porch.
“Outdoor event”
means an activity, ceremony, event, fair, function, gathering,
meeting, pageant, or program, whether athletic, civic, cultural, charitable,
community, entertainment, intellectual, recreational, or social, that:
1.
Is open to the general public;
2.
Takes place outside of an enclosed structure or building; and
3.
A person, employer, business, non-profit entity, or the city
sponsors, hosts, organizes, or operates.
“Outdoor dining area”:
1.
Means a non-enclosed area, open to the general public, or closed
to the public for a private function, where food, or beverage, or
both, are offered, served, or consumed, regardless of whether compensation
is offered or given in exchange.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
a.
A restaurant, or a bar, or both;
3.
Does not include:
a.
An outdoor dining area at a private residence; or
b.
An area, location, place, or site within the public right-of-way.
“Outdoor seating area”
means bleachers, benches, or seats, located outdoors, that
are:
1.
Permanently affixed, temporarily placed, or otherwise;
2.
Next to, in front of, facing, or opposite:
a.
A stage, platform, bandstand, or performing or speaking area;
or
b.
A playing field, track, court, diamond, or area for sports or
athletics; and
3.
Provided for an audience, viewers, spectators, or participants
of an event.
“Parking lot or structure”:
1.
Means an area, site, lot, building, structure, garage, facility,
or complex where a person parks or stores a vehicle.
2.
Does not include:
a.
A parking space on a street;
b.
A driveway to, or a garage at, a private residence; or
c.
A residential condominium complex parking lot or structure that
is for its owners’ and their guests’ exclusive use, unless
that parking lot or structure also is open or accessible to the general
public.
“Person”
means an individual, company, firm, organization, association,
trust, estate, partnership, corporation, limited liability company,
or entity however organized.
“Physical barrier”
means one or more materials, devices, or objects, including,
but not limited to, walls, partitions, doors, or membranes, that:
1.
Separate a designated smoking permitted area from a non-smoking
area in:
a.
An outdoor dining area; or
2.
Are impenetrable by, or are impervious to, secondhand smoke;
3.
Prevent secondhand smoke from escaping and migrating into:
a.
One or more non-smoking areas located on the same premises as:
i.
The outdoor dining area’s designated smoking permitted
area, or
b.
i.
The outdoor dining area’s designated smoking permitted
area, or
4.
Meet all standards and requirements in the Glendale Building
and Safety Code, or any successor legislation.
“Place of employment”:
1.
Means an area under the legal or de facto control of an employer,
business, or non-profit entity that an employee or the general public
may enter in the normal course of operations, regardless of the hours
of operation.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
a.
An office or work cubicle;
b.
An indoor or outdoor work area;
d.
A vehicle used in employment or for a business purpose;
h.
A bingo or game facility;
i.
An adult day care facility;
k.
A health care or medical care facility;
l.
A residential congregate care facility;
m.
A limited residential congregate care facility;
o.
A parking lot or structure.
“Playground”:
1.
Means an indoor or outdoor area, location, place, site, property,
lot, building, structure, facility, or complex that:
a.
Is designed partially or entirely for a child’s use; and
b.
Has play or sports equipment installed; or
c.
Has been designated or landscaped for play or sports activities.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
“Premises”:
1.
Has the same meaning as that term is defined in Section
1.04.020 of this code, or any successor legislation.
2.
Does not include an area, location, place, or site within the
public right-of-way for an outdoor dining area, as defined in this
section.
“Private golf course”
means an establishment that:
1.
Owns, controls, operates, occupies, manages, or maintains a
golf course;
2.
Restricts membership, seeking members by an invitation or application;
3.
Requires payment of one or more fees or dues for membership
admission;
4.
Allows only members and their guests to use the golf course;
and
5.
Does not allow the general public to use the golf course, even
upon payment of a nominal use or access fee.
“Private residence”:
1.
Means a detached building that:
a.
Is designed exclusively for occupancy by one person or household;
and
b.
Provides complete, independent living facilities, including
permanent provisions for sleeping, eating, cooking, and sanitation.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
a.
An accessory living quarters or guest house.
b.
A yard, grounds, walkway, stairs, porch, balcony, patio, driveway,
or garage.
c.
An accessory use that Title 30 of this code, or any successor
legislation, authorizes.
“Private vehicle”
means a vehicle that:
1.
A person, other than the city, owns, rents, leases, or otherwise
lawfully possesses or controls; and
2.
Is not a public transportation vehicle.
“Property line”
means the demarcation, or the line along the ground surface
and its vertical extension, that separates a parcel of real property
from: a public right-of-way, or another contiguous parcel of real
property, or both. The demarcation or line may be:
1.
Delineated by an identifiable natural or man-made feature, including,
for example, the place where a sidewalk abuts either a front lawn
of a home or a parking lot of a business; or
2.
Depicted or described on a map, plat, or record of the Los Angeles
County assessor or Los Angeles County registrar-recorder/county clerk.
“Public place”:
1.
Means an area, location, place, site, property, lot, building,
structure, facility, or complex, public or private, that is open or
accessible to the general public, regardless of any fee or age requirement.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
a.
A bar, restaurant, or banquet hall;
c.
A store, shopping mall, or shopping center;
h.
A barber shop or beauty salon;
j.
A convention center, meeting or conference room, or auditorium;
k.
An arboretum or botanical garden;
l.
A museum, gallery, or library;
m.
A stadium or sporting facility;
n.
A park, playground, or recreational facility;
q.
A common area of a boardinghouse or lodging house;
r.
A common area of a dormitory or residence hall;
s.
A domestic violence shelter;
v.
A retirement or rest home;
w.
An adult day care facility;
y.
A health care or medical care facility;
z.
A residential congregate care facility;
aa.
A limited residential congregate care facility;
bb.
A gas station, automobile service station, or car wash;
dd.
A retail or wholesale tobacco store;
ff.
A motion picture theater;
ii.
An elevator, escalator, or stairway;
jj.
A courtyard, plaza, lobby, atrium, or patio;
kk.
A walkway, corridor, or hallway;
ll.
A seating, waiting, or reception area;
mm.
A parking lot or structure;
“Public right-of-way”:
1.
Means a strip or area of land which by written instrument, usage,
or process of law is reserved for or dedicated to the public use for
one or more purposes, such as pedestrian or vehicular travel, utilities,
or improvements.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
c.
A planter strip (“parkway”); or
“Public transit station or stop”
1.
Means an enclosed or non-enclosed platform, sidewalk, shelter,
bench, or area where people wait for public transportation, such as
a train, bus, shuttle, or taxicab.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to, an ancillary area, such as:
b.
A ticket or vending machine;
e.
A storage locker area; or
f.
A pedestrian path or walkway.
“Recreational facility”:
1.
Means an indoor or outdoor area, location, place, site, property,
lot, building, structure, facility, or complex that is open to the
general public for one or more recreational or sport activities or
purposes, regardless of a fee for admission or use.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
a.
A playground, or a child’s play equipment or play area;
b.
A playing field, track, diamond, or area for sports or athletics;
c.
A basketball, volleyball, handball, shuffleboard, lawn bowling,
badminton, tennis, or paddle tennis court;
f.
A skateboard, ice or roller skating, or inline skating area;
g.
A bicycle path or mountain bike area;
h.
A motocross, supercross, or supermoto area;
i.
A swimming pool or aquatics facility, spa, or sauna and an area
for dressing or showering;
j.
A gymnasium and an area for dressing or showering;
q.
A billiard establishment; or
“Restaurant”:
1.
Means an establishment where food, or beverage, or both, or
are offered, served, or consumed, regardless of whether compensation
is offered or given in exchange.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
d.
A sandwich stand or kiosk;
i.
A catering facility, or an establishment where food is prepared
on the premises for serving elsewhere.
“Retail or wholesale tobacco store”:
1.
Means an establishment that, in public view, sells or offers
for sale, or exchanges or offers to exchange for any form of consideration,
tobacco, a tobacco product, or tobacco paraphernalia.
2.
Includes a store that distributes free, or a low cost sample
of, a tobacco product or tobacco paraphernalia, or both.
3.
Does not include a store that serves or sells food, or beverage,
or both.
“Retail store”
has the same meaning as the term “retail stores, general merchandise,” which is defined in Section
30.70.190 of this code, or any successor legislation.
“School”:
1.
Means:
a.
A public or private institution of learning for children, or
adults, or both; and
b.
The buildings and the grounds.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
3.
Does not include:
a.
An adult education school;
b.
A continuation high school;
c.
A vocational, technical, or professional school; or
“Secondhand smoke”
means:
1.
Smoke or other emissions released from an ignited, heated, burning,
smoldering, or idling:
a.
Cigarette, bidi, or cigar, or
b.
Tobacco product, weed, filler, or plant of any kind within a
pipe, water pipe, apparatus, device, or instrument.
“Service line”:
1.
Means a line, area, or place, public or private, at which one
or more persons are waiting for a transaction, entry, exit, or service
of any kind, regardless of whether:
a.
An exchange of money occurs; or
b.
A person is standing or seated.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
a.
An automated teller machine;
f.
A food, beverage, or merchandise line;
h.
A cashier or waiting area;
k.
A valet parking drop-off or pick-up area.
“Shopping mall”
means one or more parcels of land with one or more multi-tenant commercial buildings substantially developed as one project or development, where more than 50% of the floor area is occupied by those uses categorized as retail or service in Chapter
30.12 of this code, or any successor legislation.
“Shopping mall’s enclosed building area”:
1.
Means the aggregate gross square footage of all enclosed buildings
in a shopping mall, as shown on a record of the Los Angeles County
assessor’s office or the city’s building department, and
if the city’s record contains a different gross square footage
than the county’s record, the city’s record prevails.
2.
Does not include:
a.
The gross square footage of a residential use within an enclosed
mixed-use building; or
b.
A parking lot or structure.
“Sidewalk”
means that portion of a street, whether paved or unpaved,
provided for pedestrian travel.
“Smoke” or “smoking”:
1.
Means the act of:
a.
Igniting, heating, or burning:
i.
A cigarette, bidi, or cigar, or
ii.
A tobacco product, weed, filler, or plant of any kind within
a pipe, water pipe, apparatus, device, or instrument;
b.
Carrying or possessing an ignited, heated, or burning:
i.
Cigarette, bidi, or cigar, or
ii.
Tobacco product, weed, filler, or plant of any kind within a
pipe, water pipe, apparatus, device, or instrument; or
c.
Exhaling, or allowing emissions to diffuse into the air from,
an ignited, heated, or burning:
i.
Cigarette, bidi, or cigar, or
ii.
Tobacco product, weed, filler, or plant of any kind within a
pipe, water pipe, apparatus, device, or instrument.
2.
Does not include emissions released from combustion by any one
or more of the following appliances, devices, instruments, or products:
a.
A smudge bowl or stick, incense burner, thurible, or censer
when a person uses it for a recognized religious rite, practice, or
observance.
b.
A ceremonial pipe containing a tobacco product, weed, filler,
or plant of any kind when a Native American or Alaska Native uses
the pipe for a traditional rite, practice, or observance, whether
cultural, ceremonial, or religious, in accordance with the federal
American Indian Religious Freedom Act, 42 U.S.C. 1996 and 1996a, or
any successor legislation.
d.
A fireplace or fire pit when a person uses it with a weed or
plant for heating, cooking food, illumination, or ambiance.
e.
A barbecue, grill, smoker, or stove when a person uses it with
a weed or plant for cooking, flavoring, or preserving food.
f.
A moxa cone or stick when an acupuncturist, who is licensed
or is exempt from licensure, under California Business and Professions
Code, Chapter 12, Sections 4935 to 4949, or any successor legislation,
uses it for moxibustion treatment, or acupuncture treatment, or both.
“Smokers’ lounge”
means a retail or wholesale tobacco store, open to the general
public, within which a person may smoke, regardless of what it is
formally called, whether a cigarette, cigar, hookah, narghile, sheesha,
or tobacco club, lounge, bar, café, den, or otherwise.
“Smoker’s waste receptacle”:
1.
Means an on-site container or receptacle that is specifically
designated for discarding or disposing of a cigarette, bidi, cigar,
or tobacco product.
2.
Does not include a container or receptacle for trash or recycling.
“Smoking permitted area”
means the area, location, place, or site, identified by a
posted “smoking permitted” sign, that is cordoned off
or specifically designated, within which a person may smoke.
“‘Smoking Permitted’ sign”
means a sign or placard that:
1.
Indicates to the person viewing it that the person may lawfully
smoke within a smoking permitted area; and
2.
Meets the requirements of Section
8.52.210(D) of this chapter.
“Stage”
means a designated area or space, whether on a raised platform,
at floor-level, or otherwise, within which an actor or performer gives
a live performance at a theater.
“Street”:
1.
Means a way or place, of whatever nature, open to the general
public’s use as a matter of right for vehicular travel or, in
the case of a sidewalk, for pedestrian travel.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
d.
A marked or unmarked crosswalk;
i.
Any other area found within the public right-of-way, regardless
of what it is formally called, whether alley, avenue, court, highway,
road, or otherwise.
“Theater”:
1.
Means an establishment, regardless of what it is formally called,
whether a playhouse, amphitheater, arena theater, theater-in-the-round,
opera house, concert hall, odeum, or otherwise:
a.
With one or more auditoriums, halls, rooms, areas, or places
that:
i.
Are designed and used for exhibiting a live performance,
iii.
Have 40 or more fixed, individual seats which:
(A)
Are permanently fastened to the floor,
(B)
Are arranged in ascending, tiered, or off-set rows from the
stage to the rear or side, or rear and side, of the premises, and
(C)
Face the stage and give the audience an unobstructed view of
it,
iv.
Are not designed or used to circumvent this chapter, where,
for example, an owner, manager, or person in charge or control of
a bar or a restaurant sets up a stage or an area from which one or
more customers or guests perform, impromptu or otherwise;
b.
Is open to the general public, or are closed to the public for
a private function; and
c.
Has a current and valid zoning use certificate or certificate
of use and occupancy from the city.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to, other areas or places within
the premises:
c.
A lighting, sound, projection, or production booth;
f.
An area for constructing or storing a set, prop, or costume;
h.
A box office or ticket sales area;
i.
A food, beverage, or merchandise area; or
“Tobacco paraphernalia”:
1.
Means an apparatus, device, instrument, product, or object designed
or used for smoking, consuming, ingesting, preparing, or storing tobacco
or a tobacco product.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
a.
A cigarette wrapper or paper;
b.
A cigarette or cigar rolling machine;
“Tobacco product”:
1.
Means:
a.
Any substance or product containing tobacco leaf, or any other
preparation of tobacco, including, but not limited to:
b.
Any product or formulation of matter that:
i.
Contains a biologically active amount of nicotine; and
ii.
Is manufactured, sold, offered for sale, or otherwise distributed
with the expectation that the product or matter will be introduced
into the human body.
2.
Includes all parts and materials, such as: the paper, filter,
filter wrapper, over-wrapper, rod, portion pouch, or similar matter,
even if sold separately.
3.
Does not include tobacco that has not been processed or prepared
for human use.
“Vehicle”
has the same meaning as that term is defined in California
Vehicle Code Section 670, or any successor legislation.
“Visible”
means, in the context of a “No Smoking” sign
and “Smoking Permitted” sign, capable of being seen, without
visual aid, by a person with normal visual acuity.
“Water pipe”:
1.
Means an apparatus, including a pipe, for smoking, in which
the smoke is drawn through water or another liquid before it is inhaled.
2.
Includes, but is not limited to:
(Ord. 5464 § 2, 2005; Ord. 5628 § 3, 2008; Ord. 5686 § 2, 2010; Ord. 5772 § 7, 2012; Ord. 5780 § 1, 2012; Ord. 5796 § 1, 2013; Ord. 5797 § 1, 2013; Ord. 5812 § 18, 2013; Ord. 5846 § 1, 2015)
A. Except
as this chapter, federal law, or state law provides, no person shall
smoke:
1. In:
a. A city building or facility.
c. A city recreational facility.
e. A city parking lot or structure.
g. A city public transportation vehicle.
h. A city public transit station or stop.
i. A service line at an area or a location listed in subsection (A)(1)(a),
(b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (g), or (h) of this section.
2. Within
a 20 foot distance from:
a. An entrance/exit, open window, or air intake vent to:
i. A city building or facility.
ii. A city parking lot or structure.
iii. A service line at an area or a location listed in subsection (A)(1)(a),
(b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (g), or (h) of this section.
b. The property line of:
ii. A city recreational facility.
B. The
city manager, or a designee, may prepare, adopt, amend, repeal, and
enforce rules, regulations, or procedures to implement and administer
this section.
(Ord. 5464 § 2, 2005; Ord. 5628 § 4, 2008; Ord. 5686 § 3, 2010)
Except as this chapter, federal law, or state law provides,
no person shall smoke:
A. In a
place of employment.
B. Within
a 20 foot distance from an entrance/exit, open window, or air intake
vent to a place of employment.
(Ord. 5464 § 2, 2005; Ord. 5628 § 5, 2008; Ord. 5686 § 4, 2010)
Except as this chapter, federal law, or state law provides,
no person shall smoke in, or within a 20 foot distance from:
A. An enclosed
public place.
B. An entrance/exit,
open window, or air intake vent to an enclosed public place.
C. A service
line at an enclosed public place.
(Ord. 5464 § 2, 2005; Ord. 5628 § 6, 2008; Ord. 5686 § 5, 2010)
A. Except
as this chapter, federal law, or state law provides, no person shall
smoke in, or within a 20 foot distance from:
1. A
nonenclosed public place.
5. A
public transit station or stop.
6. A
service line at an area or a location listed in subsection (A)(1),
(2), (3), (4), or (5) of this section.
B. Except
as this chapter, federal law, or state law provides, no person shall
smoke within a 20 foot distance from the property line of a school.
(Ord. 5464 § 2, 2005; Ord. 5628 § 7, 2008; Ord. 5686 § 6, 2010)
A. Except
as this chapter, federal law, or state law provides, no person shall
smoke in, or within a 20 foot distance from:
1. A
common area of:
a. Multi-unit rental housing.
b. A residential condominium complex.
2. An
entrance/exit, open window, or air intake vent to:
a. Multi-unit rental housing.
b. A residential condominium complex.
B. Except
as this chapter, federal law, or state law provides, no person shall
smoke on or within an outdoor balcony or patio of:
1. A
smoking unit or non-smoking unit in multi-unit rental housing.
2. A
residential condominium unit.
C. Except as Section
8.52.130 or
8.52.140 of this chapter, federal law, or state law provides, on and after June 27, 2013:
1. The
entire premises of multi-unit rental housing, a residential condominium
complex, and a residential condominium unit, including a common area
and an outdoor balcony or patio located at that structure, must be
100% non-smoking.
2. No
person shall smoke in, or within a 20 foot distance from, an area
or a location listed in subsection (C)(1) of this section.
D. Subsection
(C)(1) of this section does not apply to multi-unit rental housing,
a residential condominium complex, or a residential condominium unit
for which on or before June 26, 2013, the city has issued a certificate
of occupancy.
(Ord. 5464 § 2, 2005; Ord. 5628 § 8, 2008; Ord. 5686 § 7, 2010; Ord. 5797 § 2, 2013)
A. No person
shall cause, permit, allow, aid, abet, or conceal a violation of any
one or more of this chapter’s provisions.
B. Except
in a smoker’s waste receptacle, no person shall place, discard,
or dispose of smoking waste in or upon:
4. A
planter strip (“parkway”).
C. No person shall place or maintain, or allow the placing or maintaining of, a smoker’s waste receptacle in an area or a location listed in Section
8.52.040(A),
8.52.050,
8.52.060,
8.52.070, or
8.52.080 of this chapter, except as may be necessary to encourage compliance with this chapter, federal law, or state law.
D. No person
shall intimidate, threaten or effect a reprisal, or retaliate against
another person who seeks to attain compliance with one or more of
this chapter’s provisions.
E. No person
shall alter, deface, obscure, remove, or destroy a sign or placard
that this chapter authorizes.
(Ord. 5628 § 9, 2008; Ord. 5686 § 8, 2010; Ord. 5812 § 19, 2013)
A. Before
a prospective tenant signs a lease or rental agreement for a unit
for rent within multi-unit rental housing, the landlord shall:
1. Disclose
to the prospective tenant whether:
a. Smoking is permitted in the unit for rent; and
b. The unit for rent was designated as a smoking or non-smoking unit
for the tenant last residing in it.
2. Provide
the prospective tenant with a site plan that shows:
a. The position of the unit for rent, smoking units, and non-smoking
units, relative to one another, in the building or complex; and
b. The location of:
i. All common areas of multi-unit rental housing where smoking is prohibited;
and
ii. Any smoking permitted area.
B. When
a tenant signs a lease or rental agreement for a unit within multi-unit
rental housing:
1. The
landlord shall attach as an exhibit to each copy of the lease or rental
agreement the site plan described in subsection (A)(2) of this section;
2. The
tenant shall acknowledge having received the site plan, by initialing
or signing it; and
3. The
landlord shall maintain a copy of the lease or rental agreement:
a. For each tenant who leases or rents a smoking unit or non-smoking
unit; and
b. While the tenant leases or rents the unit, and for two years after
the date on which the tenant vacates the unit.
C. A landlord
shall post a diagram, which contains the requisite information, and
which is positioned at the designated place, specified by Subsection
2, Section 14.2, Volume VII of the Glendale Building and Safety Code,
2011, or any successor legislation, showing the location of:
1. Smoking
units and non-smoking units, relative to one another, in the building
or complex; and
2. A smoking permitted area authorized under Section
8.52.130 of this chapter.
D. A landlord
shall permit the director of community development, or a designee,
at any time, to examine and copy:
1. The
site plan that subsection (A)(2) of this section requires; and
2. The
lease or rental agreement that subsection (B)(3) of this section requires.
(Ord. 5628 § 10, 2008; Ord. 5686 § 9, 2010; Ord. 5780 § 2, 2012; Ord. 5798 § 1, 2013)
Smoking is permitted in the following locations within the city,
unless federal law or state law prohibits it:
A. A private
residence, except during the period when it is operated or used as:
1. An
adult day care facility;
3. A
health care or medical care facility;
4. A
residential congregate care facility; or
5. A
limited residential congregate care facility.
B. A house
of worship, except for the portion of its premises on which the following
use occurs and during the period when the portion of the premises
is operated or used as:
1. An
adult day care facility;
2. A
child care facility; or
C. A private
residence located adjacent to, or within a 20 foot distance from,
a school.
D. A boardinghouse
or lodging house.
E. A caretaker’s
residence on private property.
F. A dormitory
or residence hall.
J. A smoking permitted area that the city manager, or a designee, may designate within an area or a location listed in Section
8.52.040(A) of this chapter.
(Ord. 5628 § 11, 2008; Ord. 5686 § 10, 2010)
A. Even though Sections
8.52.050 and
8.52.070 of this chapter prohibit smoking in an outdoor dining area, an owner, manager, or person in charge or control of an outdoor dining area may designate a portion of the premises’ adjoining outdoor area as a smoking permitted area, when the designated smoking permitted area meets all of the requirements listed in subsections
B and
C of this section.
B. An owner,
manager, or person in charge of an outdoor dining area shall:
1. Obtain,
maintain, and renew a license required under Section 5.98.020 of this
code, for designating, operating, and maintaining an outdoor smoking
permitted area on the premises; and
2. Pay
the fee for the license.
C. A designated
smoking permitted area:
1. Must
represent a separate and discrete area of the outdoor dining area;
2. Must
have a clearly marked boundary by using one or more of the following
means, including, but not limited to:
c. A row of plant containers;
d. Tables and chairs of a specific color; or
e. A painted line, except on property that the city or the Glendale
successor agency owns, controls, operates, occupies, manages, or maintains;
3. Must
be identified by one or more posted “Smoking Permitted”
signs;
4. Must
not comprise more than:
a. Twenty-five percent of the premises’ total outdoor seating
capacity in the outdoor dining area (calculating any fraction or partial
number downward to the nearest whole number), for an outdoor dining
area that measures less than 2,000 square feet;
b. Fifty percent of the premises’ total outdoor seating capacity
in the outdoor dining area (calculating any fraction or partial number
downward to the nearest whole number), for an outdoor dining area
that measures 2,000 square feet to less than 5,000 square feet; or
c. Sixty-six percent of the premises’ total outdoor seating capacity
in the outdoor dining area (calculating any fraction or partial number
downward to the nearest whole number), for an outdoor dining area
that measures 5,000 or more square feet;
5. Must
have all tables and chairs:
a. Located:
i. Inside of a physical barrier; or
ii. The greatest distance practicable, but at least 15 feet away, from
all tables and chairs in the indoor and outdoor non-smoking areas,
measured from the clearly marked boundary described in subsection
(C)(2) of this section;
iv. Not closer to the property line than the applicable building setback line for that zone or specific plan, as established in Title
30 of this code, for an outdoor dining area in which subsection (C)(4)(b) or (c) of this section applies; and
b. Arranged so that they cannot be placed deliberately or inadvertently
within the 15 foot separation area or outside of the physical barrier;
6. Must
not allow secondhand smoke to enter into one or more non-smoking areas
located on the same premises as the outdoor dining area’s designated
smoking permitted area;
7. Must
have at least one smoker’s waste receptacle on each table; and
8. Must not be located on any portion of a public right-of-way and must comply with the requirements of Section
12.08.035 of this code.
D. An employee,
owner, manager, or person in charge or control of an outdoor dining
area shall ask a patron, before seating that person, whether the patron
prefers seating in a smoking or non-smoking part of the outdoor dining
area.
E. An owner,
manager, or person in charge or control of an outdoor dining area
shall:
1. Maintain
on the premises a plan or diagram of the outdoor dining area that
depicts and describes:
a. The dimensions and layout of the outdoor dining area’s:
iv. Designated smoking permitted area, and
b. The total number of tables and chairs in the outdoor dining area;
c. The location of, and the separation distance between, tables and
chairs in the outdoor dining areas:
ii. Designated smoking permitted area; and
d. The material, object, or device placed as any physical barrier.
2. Permit
the director of community development, or a designee, at any time,
to:
a. Enter and inspect the premises and the outdoor dining area; and
b. Examine and copy the plan or diagram that subsection (E)(1) of this
section requires.
F. If an owner, manager, or person in charge or control of an outdoor dining area cannot satisfy all of the requirements listed in subsections (C)(1) through (7) of this section, the outdoor dining area is entirely a non-smoking area and Section
8.52.070 of this chapter applies.
(Ord. 5628 § 12, 2008; Ord. 5686 § 11, 2010; Ord. 5780 § 3, 2012; Ord. 5798 § 2, 2013; Ord. 5812 § 20, 2013; Ord. 5846 § 2, 2015)
A. Even
though Section 8.52.080(A)(1)(a), (A)(2)(a), and (B)(1) of this chapter
prohibits smoking in specific areas of multi-unit rental housing,
and even though Section 8.52.080(C)(2) of this chapter prohibits smoking
on the entire premises of multi-unit rental housing, a landlord of
multi-unit rental housing may designate a portion of the premises’
outdoor area as a smoking permitted area, when the smoking permitted
area meets all of the requirements listed in subsections B., C., and
D. of this section.
B. A landlord
of multi-unit rental housing shall:
1. Obtain,
maintain, and renew a license required under section 5.98.020 of this
code, for designating, operating, and maintaining an outdoor smoking
permitted area on the premises; and
2. Pay
the fee for the license.
C. A smoking
permitted area:
1. Must
be located the greatest distance practicable, but at least 20 feet
away, from:
a. A non-smoking rental unit;
b. An indoor common area of multi-unit rental housing where smoking
is prohibited;
c. An outdoor area that a child primarily uses, including, but not limited
to, a playground or any other place improved or designated for a child’s
swimming or playing; and
d. An adjacent area or location—listed in section 8.52.040.A.,
8.52.050, 8.52.060, 8.52.070, or 8.52.080 of this chapter—where
smoking is prohibited;
2. Must
measure 40 square feet or less in total area;
3. May
be combined or merged with another on-site smoking permitted area;
4. Must
have a clearly marked perimeter;
5. Must
be identified by one or more posted “Smoking Permitted”
signs; and
6. Must
have at least one smoker’s waste receptacle.
D. The
number of smoking permitted areas within multi-unit rental housing,
as determined by the multi-unit rental housing’s total lot area,
must not exceed the corresponding numerical limit listed in the following
table:
Smoking Permitted Areas in Multi-Unit Rental Housing
|
---|
Square Feet of Total Lot Area
|
Number of Smoking Permitted Areas
|
---|
0—7,500
|
No more than 1
|
7,501—15,000
|
No more than 2
|
15,001—22,500
|
No more than 3
|
22,501—30,000
|
No more than 4
|
30,001—37,500
|
No more than 5
|
37,501—45,000
|
No more than 6
|
45,001 or more
|
No more than 7
|
E. If a
landlord cannot satisfy the requirements listed in subsections C.1.
through 6. of this section, the director of community development,
or a designee, may approve a smoking permitted area that meets this
section’s requirements to the extent practicable.
(Ord. 5628, § 13, 2008; Ord. 5686, § 12, 3-9-2010; Ord. 5780, § 4, 10-2-2012; Ord. 5797, § 3, 5-28-2013; Ord. 5812, § 21, 11-5-2013)
A. Even
though subsections 8.52.080.A.1.b., A.2.b., and B.2. of this chapter
prohibits smoking in specific areas of a residential condominium complex,
and even though subsection 8.52.080.C.2. of this chapter prohibits
smoking on the entire premises of a residential condominium complex,
a residential condominium complex association may designate a portion
of the premises’ outdoor area as a smoking permitted area, when
the smoking permitted area meets all of the requirements listed in
subsections B., C., and D. of this section.
B. A residential
condominium complex association shall:
1. Obtain,
maintain, and renew a license required under section 5.98.020 of this
code, for designating, operating, and maintaining an outdoor smoking
permitted area on the premises; and
2. Pay
the fee for the license.
C. A smoking
permitted area:
1. Must
be located the greatest distance practicable, but at least 20 feet
away, from:
a. A residential condominium unit;
b. An indoor common area of the residential condominium complex where
smoking is prohibited;
c. An outdoor area that a child primarily uses, including, but not limited
to, a playground or any other place improved or designated for a child’s
swimming or playing; and
d. An adjacent area or location—listed in section 8.52.040.A.,
8.52.050, 8.52.060, 8.52.070, or 8.52.080 of this chapter—where
smoking is prohibited;
2. Must
measure 40 square feet or less in total area;
3. May
be combined or merged with another on-site smoking permitted area;
4. Must
have a clearly marked perimeter;
5. Must
be identified by one or more posted “Smoking Permitted”
signs; and
6. Must
have at least one smoker’s waste receptacle.
D. The
number of smoking permitted areas within a residential condominium
complex, as determined by the residential condominium complex’s
total lot area, must not exceed the corresponding numerical limit
listed in the following table:
Smoking Permitted Areas in Residential Condominium Complex
|
---|
Square Feet of Total Lot Area
|
Number of Smoking Permitted Areas
|
---|
0—7,500
|
No more than 1
|
7,501—15,000
|
No more than 2
|
15,001—22,500
|
No more than 3
|
22,501—30,000
|
No more than 4
|
30,001—37,500
|
No more than 5
|
37,501—45,000
|
No more than 6
|
45,001 or more
|
No more than 7
|
E. If a
residential condominium complex association cannot satisfy the requirements
listed in subsections C.1. through 6. of this section, the director
of community development, or a designee, may approve a smoking permitted
area that meets this section’s requirements to the extent practicable.
(Ord. 5628, § 14, 2008; Ord. 5686, § 13, 3-9-2010; Ord. 5780, § 5, 10-2-2012; Ord. 5797, § 4, 5-28-2013; Ord. 5812, § 22, 11-5-2013)
A. Even though sections
8.52.060 and
8.52.070 of this chapter prohibit smoking in a guest room of a hotel or motel, an owner, manager, or person in charge of a hotel or motel may designate one or more guest rooms as a smoking guest room, when the hotel or motel meets all of the requirements listed in subsection
B. of this section.
B. The
hotel or motel must:
1. Permanently
designate 80% or more of its guest rooms as non-smoking rooms;
2. Post
one or more:
a. “No Smoking” signs in the non-smoking rooms; and
b. “Smoking Permitted” signs in the smoking rooms;
3. Permanently
remove smoker’s waste receptacles and matches from the non-smoking
rooms; and
4. Segregate
smoking rooms from non-smoking rooms on separate floors, wings, or
portions of either, without interspersing smoking rooms and non-smoking
rooms.
(Ord. 5628, § 15, 2008; Ord. 5686, § 14, 3-9-2010; Ord. 5780, § 6, 10-2-2012; Ord. 5812, § 23, 11-5-2013)
A. Even though sections
8.52.060 and
8.52.070 of this chapter prohibit smoking indoors and outdoors at a shopping mall, an owner, manager, or person in charge of a shopping mall may designate a nonenclosed, common area as a smoking permitted area, when the smoking permitted area meets all of the requirements listed in subsections B., C., and D. of this section.
B. An owner,
manager, or person in charge of a shopping mall shall:
1. Obtain,
maintain, and renew a license required under section 5.98.020 of this
code, for designating, operating, and maintaining an outdoor smoking
permitted area on the premises; and
2. Pay
the fee for the license.
C. A smoking
permitted area:
1. Must
be located the greatest distance practicable, but at least 20 feet
away, from:
a. An opening, or an entrance/exit, to an enclosed area;
b. An access way between a parking lot or structure and one or more
retail areas of the shopping mall; and
c. An adjacent area or location—listed in section 8.52.040.A.,
8.52.050, 8.52.060, 8.52.070, or 8.52.080 of this chapter—where
smoking is prohibited;
2. Must
measure 40 square feet or less in total area;
3. Must
be located not less than 250 feet apart from one another;
4. Must
not be combined or merged with another on-site smoking permitted area;
5. Must
have a clearly marked perimeter;
6. Must
be identified by one or more posted “Smoking Permitted”
signs; and
7. Must
have at least one smoker’s waste receptacle.
D. The
number of smoking permitted areas within a shopping mall, as determined
by the shopping mall’s enclosed building area, must not exceed
the corresponding numerical limit listed in the following table:
Smoking Permitted Areas in Shopping Malls
|
---|
Square Feet of Enclosed Building Area
|
Number of Smoking Permitted Areas
|
---|
0—30,000
|
No more than 1
|
30,001—50,000
|
No more than 2
|
50,001—75,000
|
No more than 3
|
75,001—150,000
|
No more than 4
|
150,001—300,000
|
No more than 5
|
300,000—700,000
|
No more than 6
|
700,001—999,999
|
No more than 8
|
1,000,000 or more
|
No more than 10
|
E. If a
an owner, manager, or person in charge of a shopping mall cannot satisfy
the requirements listed in subsections C.1. through 7. of this section,
the director of community development, or a designee, may approve
a smoking permitted area that meets this section’s requirements
to the extent practicable.
(Ord. 5686, § 15, 3-9-2010; Ord. 5780, § 7, 10-2-2012; Ord. 5798, § 3, 6-4-2013; Ord. 5812, § 24, 11-5-2013)
A. Even though sections
8.52.060 and
8.52.070 of this chapter prohibit smoking indoors and outdoors at a vehicle dealership, an owner, manager, or person in charge of a vehicle dealership may designate a portion of the premises’ outdoor display lot as a smoking permitted area, when the smoking permitted area meets all of the requirements listed in subsections
B. and C. of this section.
B. An owner,
manager, or person in charge of a vehicle dealership shall:
1. Obtain,
maintain, and renew a license required under section 5.98.020 of this
code, for designating, operating, and maintaining an outdoor smoking
permitted area on the premises; and
2. Pay
the fee for the license.
C. A smoking
permitted area:
1. Must
be located the greatest distance practicable, but at least 20 feet
away, from:
b. An indoor or outdoor:
i. Seating, waiting, or reception area;
vi. Parts or accessories area;
c. An opening, or an entrance/exit, to an enclosed area;
d. A service line at an area or a location listed in subsection 1.a.,
b., or c. above; and
e. An adjacent area or location—listed in section 8.52.040.A.,
8.52.050, 8.52.060, 8.52.070, or 8.52.080 of this chapter—where
smoking is prohibited;
2. Must
have a clearly marked perimeter;
3. Must
be identified by one or more posted “Smoking Permitted”
signs; and
4. Must
have at least one smoker’s waste receptacle.
D. If a
an owner, manager, or person in charge of a vehicle dealership cannot
satisfy the requirements listed in subsections C.1. through 4. of
this section, the director of community development, or a designee,
may approve a smoking permitted area that meets this section’s
requirements to the extent practicable.
(Ord. 5628, § 16, 2008; Ord. 5686, § 16, 3-9-2010; Ord. 5812, § 25, 11-5-2013)
A. Even though section
8.52.060 of this chapter prohibits smoking at a retail or wholesale tobacco store, an owner, manager, or person in charge of a retail or wholesale tobacco store may designate a portion of the premises as a smoking permitted area—known as a smokers’ lounge—when the smoking permitted area meets all of the requirements listed in subsections
B. and C, of this section.
B. An owner,
manager, or person in charge of a retail or wholesale tobacco store
shall:
1. Obtain,
maintain, and renew a license required under section 5.98.020 of this
code, for designating, operating, and maintaining an outdoor smoking
permitted area on the premises; and
2. Pay
the fee for the license.
C. A retail
or wholesale tobacco store must:
1. Specifically
designate an enclosed area with a physical barrier in, or attached
to, its premises for smoking a tobacco product—purchased on-site—by
one or more of its customers;
2. Comply
with the ventilation requirements specified in California
Labor Code
Section 6404.5(d)(13)(A) and (B), or any successor legislation;
3. Reserve:
a. Twenty-five percent or more of its interior floor space for displaying
tobacco products and tobacco paraphernalia for sale; and
b. Fifteen percent or less of its interior floor space, or 250 square
feet or less of its interior floor space—whichever measurement
is smaller—for the customer smoking permitted area;
4. Have
a current and valid zoning use certificate or certificate of use and
occupancy from the city; and
5. Post
one or more:
a. “No Smoking” signs in its premises; and
b. “Smoking Permitted” signs in the smokers’ lounge.
(Ord. 5628, § 17, 2008; Ord. 5686, § 17, 3-9-2010; Ord. 5780, § 8, 10-2-2012; Ord. 5812, § 26, 11-5-2013)
A. An actor
or performer may smoke on a stage at a theater, when the theater meets
all of the following conditions:
1. Smoking
is an integral part of the story, scene, or performance;
2. The
actor or performer smokes during the performance, in front of an audience,
and not during a rehearsal; and
3. The
theater’s owner, manager, or employee:
a. Posts one or more conspicuous signs at the theater—including,
but not limited to, a ticket sales area; entrance/exit to the seating
area; food, beverage, or merchandise area—stating that smoking
will occur on stage during the performance; and
b. Announces to the audience, before the performance begins, that smoking
will occur on the stage during the performance.
B. An actor
or performer may smoke on a soundstage, set, or within an area where
a filming or video recording occurs for a motion picture or television
production, when the filming or video recording meets all of the following
conditions:
1. Smoking
is an integral part of the story, scene, or performance;
2. The
actor or performer smokes during the filming or video recording and
not during a rehearsal; and
3. The
city has issued a motion picture and television production permit,
under Section 5.08.350 of this code, or any successor legislation,
for the filming or video recording, unless—under that section—the
filming or video recording is exempt from the permit requirement.
(Ord. 5628, § 18, 2008; Ord. 5686, § 18, 3-9-2010)
The following persons or establishments may declare an area—where
smoking otherwise would be permitted—as a nonsmoking area, or
may prohibit smoking throughout the property, if the person or establishment
posts in that area one or more “No Smoking” signs:
E. An apartment
owner or landlord.
F. A residential
condominium complex association.
G. A private
residence owner.
H. A boardinghouse
or lodging house owner, operator, or manager.
I. A dormitory
or residence hall owner, operator, or manager.
(Ord. 5628, § 19, 2008; Ord. 5686, § 19, 3-9-2010)
A. The
city manager or a designee:
1. May select, authorize, establish, change, and discontinue the location, size, and duration of a smoking permitted area for an area or a location listed in Section
8.52.040(A) of this chapter;
2. Shall
authorize the posting of one or more:
a. “No Smoking” signs at each entrance/exit to, and a conspicuous place within, an area or a location listed in Section
8.52.040(A) of this chapter; and
b. “Smoking Permitted” signs at a smoking permitted area;
and
3. Shall
select, authorize, and establish the contents, lettering, size, and
color of the sign.
B.
1. A
person, landlord, employer, business, or nonprofit entity that has
legal or de facto control of that area or location shall post a “No
Smoking” sign:
a. At:
i. Each entrance/exit to that area or location; and
ii. Another place, within that area or location, that is easily seen
by a person entering that area or location.
b. Which:
i. Meets the requirements of subsection
(D) of this section; and
ii. Contains:
(A)
The international “No Smoking” symbol; and
(B)
The words “No Smoking” that are printed with letters
that contrast against the background material and measure not less
than one inch in height.
2. The
presence or absence of a “No Smoking” sign, or a “No
Smoking” sign’s noncompliance with this section’s
requirements:
a. Does not prevent any one or more of the persons who are listed in Section
8.52.220(A),
(D), or
(E) of this chapter from enforcing any one or more provisions of this chapter; and
C.
1. A
person, landlord, employer, business, or nonprofit entity that has
legal or de facto control of that area or location shall post a “Smoking
Permitted” sign:
a. At:
i. Each entrance/exit to that area or location; and
ii. Another place, within that area or location, that is easily seen
by a person entering that area or location.
b. Which:
i. Meets the requirements of subsection
D of this section; and
ii. Contains:
(A)
The pictorial representation of a burning cigarette; or
(B)
The words “Smoking Permitted” that are printed with
letters that contrast against the background material and measure
not less than one inch in height.
2. The
presence or absence of a “Smoking Permitted” sign, or
a “Smoking Permitted” sign’s noncompliance with
this section’s requirements:[li51(B) The words “Smoking
Permitted” that are printed with letters that contrast against
the background material and measure not less than one inch in height.
a. Does not prevent any one or more of the persons who are listed in Section
8.52.220(A),
(D), or
(E) of this chapter from enforcing any one or more provisions of this chapter; and
D. A sign posted in compliance with subsection
(B), or subsection
(C), or both subsections of this section must be:
1. Made
of a durable or weather-proof material;
2. Legible,
accurate, and printed with:
a. The telephone number that the city manager, or a designee, specifies
for making a complaint or reporting a violation of this chapter; and
b. The citation: “Glendale Municipal Code, Chapter 8.52”
or “G.M.C. 8.52”;
3. Stationary,
permanently affixed, and positioned at a height of between five and
seven feet above the floor or ground; and
4. Visible
and not obscured in any way.
E. The standards and requirements for directional and informational signs in Section
30.33.190 of this code, or any successor legislation, do not apply to this section.
(Ord. 5628, § 21, 2008; Ord. 5686, § 20, 3-9-2010)
A. City
Personnel Authorized to Enforce Chapter. Any one or more of the following
city representatives has all necessary powers and authority to enforce
this chapter:
1. The
city manager or a designee;
2. The
director of community services and parks or a designee;
3. A
Glendale police department officer;
4. The
director of community development or a designee; or
5. A
license investigator for the city.
B. Criminal
Prosecution. A violation of section 8.52.040.A.; 8.52.050; 8.52.060;
8.52.070; 8.52.080; 8.52.090.A., B., or C.; 8.52.100; or 8.52.210.B.,
C., or D. of this chapter is punishable under subsection 1.20.010.D.
of this code, or any successor legislation.
C. Public
Nuisance. The city council declares that exposing another person to
secondhand smoke, by committing a violation of this chapter, is a
public nuisance.
D. Civil
Enforcement by City Attorney.
1. In
addition to, or in place of, prosecuting a criminal action under this
chapter, the city attorney may take any one or more lawful steps—including,
but not limited to, commencing one or more civil actions, or administrative
proceedings, or both, in the manner the law provides, to:
a. Enforce this chapter’s provisions; and
b. Obtain one or more appropriate remedies available at law or in equity.
2. The
prevailing party may recover attorney’s fees and costs in any
judicial action, or administrative proceeding, or both, for the city’s
exercising one or more remedies under this section.
E. Civil
Enforcement by Private Citizen.
1. A
person—acting on behalf of that person’s own interests,
its members, or the general public— may bring a civil action
in any court of competent jurisdiction, including small claims court,
to enforce any one or more provisions of this chapter. That person,
a “private enforcer,” may file an action against another
person if the following requirements are met:
a. The other person violated a provision of this chapter two or more
times;
b. The private enforcer gave the other person written notice of each
violation, within 30 days after its occurrence; and
c. The private enforcer files the lawsuit no earlier than 60 days after
the date on which the private enforcer gave the other person the second
written notice of the violation.
2. A
private enforcer may bring a civil action solely on behalf of the
general public, and that civil action:
a. Neither precludes nor bars the private enforcer from bringing a later
civil action based upon the same facts but seeking relief on the private
enforcer’s own behalf; and
b. May proceed in a court even when the private enforcer is legally
or equitably barred from seeking relief on the private enforcer’s
own behalf.
3. A
private enforcer may seek any one or more of the following forms of
relief. Upon proof of a violation, a court shall grant all appropriate
relief, including:
a. Damages, in the amount of either:
i. Actual damages, upon proof of damages; or
ii. Statutory damages—in the amount of $250 for each violation
of this chapter—upon no proof, or insufficient proof, of damages.
Unless this chapter specifies otherwise:
(A)
Each day of a continuing violation constitutes a separate violation.
(B)
A private enforcer suing on the general public’s behalf
cannot recover statutory damages for a violation of this chapter when
a court has adjudicated a previous claim for the same violation—brought
on the general public’s behalf and when statutory damages were
sought—regardless of whether the private enforcer was a party
to that adjudication.
b. Restitution to the appropriate party or parties of the gains that
the defendant obtained in violation of this chapter.
c. Exemplary damages, when the private enforcer proves by clear and
convincing evidence that the defendant is guilty of oppression, fraud,
malice, or a conscious disregard for the public health and safety.
d. An injunction or conditional judgment.
4. When
a private enforcer brings an action under subsection E.1. of this
section:
a. A court may award reasonable attorney’s fees and costs to a
private enforcer who obtains relief under subsection E.3. of this
section.
b. A court may award reasonable attorney’s fees and costs to a
defendant, if the court finds that the private enforcer, or the private
enforcer’s attorney, or both, filed a bad-faith action, a frivolous
action, or an action for the sole purpose of harassing the defendant.
c. The same rules and standards under California
Code of Civil Procedure
Section 128.5 or 128.7 apply to the private enforcer’s action,
when it is a limited or unlimited civil case.
d. Upon settlement or judgment of the action, the private enforcer shall
give the city attorney written notice of that settlement or judgment
and of the case’s outcome, within 30 days after the date on
which:
i. The private enforcer and one or more defendants sign a written settlement
agreement; or
ii. A judge enters a judgment or dismisses the case.
F. Cumulative
Remedies, Penalties, or Procedures; Other Laws.
1. The
remedies, penalties, or procedures that this chapter provides are
cumulative to each other and to the remedies, penalties, or procedures
available under all other laws.
2. Nothing
in this chapter precludes a person from seeking any other remedy,
penalty, or procedure that the law provides.
(Ord. 5628, § 20, 2008; Ord. 5686, § 21, 3-9-2010; Ord. 5780, § 9, 10-2-2012; Ord. 5796, § 2, 5-28-2013)
A. Neighborhood
services inspectors and Glendale police department officers may enforce
the provisions of California
Labor Code Section 6404.5, or any successor
legislation, governing smoking in enclosed places of employment.
B. In performing
the function of monitoring and enforcing compliance with the provisions
of
Labor Code Section 6404.5, neighborhood services supervisors and
inspectors, who have successfully completed a course and a written
examination, through California’s Commission on Peace Officer
Standards and Training, on the laws and powers of arrest under California
Penal Code Section 832, or any successor legislation, and whom the
director of community development has authorized to engage in enforcement
activity, have the power, authority, and immunity of a California
peace officer to issue infraction citations for a violation of California
Labor Code Section 6404.5. However, because these individuals are
non-sworn personnel and are not peace officers, they shall not make
custodial arrests, or carry or use a firearm within the scope and
course of their employment, or both.
(Ord. 5628, § 22, 2008; Ord. 5686, § 22, 3-9-2010; Ord. 5780, § 10, 10-2-2012; Ord. 5798, § 4, 6-4-2013)
A. This
chapter is in addition to any other prohibition or limitation on smoking
under federal, state, or local law. The city council intends this
chapter to supplement—and not to duplicate or contradict—other
applicable law.
B. This
chapter must not be construed or interpreted to permit smoking when
another applicable law prohibits or restricts it. If another applicable
law is more restrictive in regulating smoking, that law governs.
(Ord. 5628, § 23, 2008; Ord. 5686, § 23, 3-9-2010)