Parks back-and-forth smoking ban

Welcome ruling, but ban guns as well

It is interesting that “public pressure” saved the right for smokers to pack in and consume their addiction at public parks [“No smoking ban after all,” NWFriday, Feb. 19]. Not being a smoker, I laud Parks Superintendent Timothy Gallagher’s solution of requiring smoker’s to steer clear of non-puffers by at least 25 feet.

It occurs to me that a similar restriction could be placed on those individuals who demand the right to tote guns in and around children play areas. Since guns have a farther range — and are more immediately lethal than cigarette smoke — it might be prudent for Gallagher to set aside special “gun parks” similar to Seattle’s numerous “dog parks.”

This should please the gun-dependent and preserve — if not improve — our murder-rate statistics. In these set-aside areas, gun-packing citizens could frolic and play brandishing their weapons. I assume no leashes would be required.

— David Clifton, Seattle

Unwelcome reversal

Parks Superintendent Timothy Gallagher was right the first time around and shouldn’t have caved in on his position. There’s no getting around it: Smoking is pollution.

If we have the expectation that governments should rid our planet of toxic industrial waste-byproducts, then how are we wrong in similarly expecting them to keep parks clear of smokers when the only difference between these is a matter of degree?

What Chernobyl was on a massive industrial scale, smoking is on a private individual scale — it’s pollution.

— Herb Aldinger, Seattle