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A Guide to Smoke Free Housing

September 08, 2016 3:08 PM | Deleted user
By Kristina Hamilton,
Senior Manager, Tobacco Control

American Lung Association in Greater Chicago

 If someone smokes in your property, you know how serious the damage can be: burned carpet, stained walls, and the residual smell.  Secondhand smoke is hard on your investment, so imagine what it does to your residents.

 In a multi-unit building, 35 to 65 percent of the air in any given unit is shared from other units and common areas. That means if just one resident smokes, all other residents in that building share the consequences, including an increased risk of heart attacks, stroke and lung cancer. If children are exposed to secondhand smoke, they will have an increased risk of asthma attacks, infections, and SIDS (crib death).

 You can protect your residents’ health and your investment by making your properties smoke-free. Going smoke-free doesn’t mean that you don’t accept residents who smoke. Simply put, a smoke-free building is one in which smoking is not permitted indoors, including in any units or common areas. Adopting a smoke-free policy is legal, profitable and easy.

 Smoke-free policies are legal. Just like your policies regarding noise and pets, you can enact policies to prohibit smoking to create a better, safer living environment for your residents. In fact, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development is in the process of transitioning all of its properties to smoke-free and strongly encourages private property owners and managers to do the same.

 Smoke-free policies are profitable. Compared with a unit where smoking is allowed, smoke-free units can cost two to six times less to turn over. In addition, a poll commissioned by Cook County Department of Public Health found that more than two-thirds of suburban Cook County renters would be more likely to rent in a smoke-free building than a building that permitted smoking in units. One out of five renters even said they would be willing to pay more to live in smoke-free housing.

 Smoke-free policies are easy. Developing and implementing a smoke-free policy takes minimal effort and produces maximum results for you and your residents. Once implemented, smoke-free policies are generally self-enforcing and require little staff time. Check out this step-by-step guide to implementing smoke-free housing for rental properties. Community associations who wish to become smoke-free would require a bylaws update.

 When you’re ready to get started, Healthy HotSpot is here to help. We work with property owners and managers, public housing agencies, private developers and community organizations to transition properties to smoke-free. We can provide free technical assistance, including help with sample lease language, resident surveys, smoke-free signage, smoking cessation resources and fact sheets.

 For more information, visit www.healthyhotspot.org or contact Aesha Binion at the Cook County Department of Public Health: abinion@cookcountyhhs.org or 708-633-8342. Property owners/managers outside of Cook County may find resources here.

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