As expected, the city gave final approval tonight to lifting - for at least a year - a smoking ban in this resort's 11 casinos that went into effect Oct. 15.
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Under a measure approved 5-4 by the City Council and signed by Mayor Scott Evans, the ban will be suspended Nov. 15. It would have taken a 6-3 council vote for the measure to become effective immediately, city officials said.
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Casino operators argued earlier this month that the ban would cripple Atlantic City's $5 billion gambling industry already reeling from a weak economy and from regional slots competition, primarily from Pennsylvania.
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Council member Marty Small said he voted tonight to lift the ban "because of the economy. . . . I felt it was the responsible thing to do."
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The council first voted to delay the ban Oct. 8, after pressure from seven casinos. City ordinance required a second vote to make the delay final - hence, tonight's action.
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The four Harrah's Atlantic City casinos did not request postponement.
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The controversial ban originally won unanimous council approval in mid-April - one year after a partial smoking ban took effect. The full ban required casinos to construct enclosed lounges where no gaming would be allowed.
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In testimony earlier today, casino workers and health advocates had vigorously urged the City Council not to lift the ban.
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"There is no reason for their unanimous vote [in April] to be compromised by unsubstantiated fear tactics," Michele Gallagher of the American Cancer Society said before the hearing. "Public health is the guiding factor here."
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Debora Ogle, a dealer at Caesars casino, was shaken by tonight's vote. The casinos, she said, "just don't care about our health. This is not an economic issue. It's a health issue. How can you put a price tag on someone's life?"
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Trump Plaza dealer Ed Little, who also wanted to keep the ban in place, said the casinos had been "opportunistic" in now asking for the reversal. "With the country in a financial crisis, that was their excuse," he said.
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But one gambler said he was pleased he could still light up while at his favorite slots game at Showboat casino here.
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"Smoking lounges do not help very much," said Lucien Cirincione, 73, of Forked River, N.J. "I will not leave the machine I am playing and walk to a smoking lounge to have a cigarette."
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