Butts Out
University of Texas moves to completely ban smoking to land $88 million incancer grants
University of Texas at Austin officials announced this week that they could implement a completely tobacco-free campus initiative, with official talks on the smoking ban starting as early as Friday.
UT already designates indoor spaces, classrooms and dorms — and a distance of 20 feet from campus buildings' entrances — as a non-smoking zone, but the push for a full-on ban has been influenced by the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas, an organization that has awarded researchers at UT approximately $30 million in research funding.
The university is applying for $88 million more from the institution this year, and the stipulation for consideration: Campus must be tobacco-free by March 1.
The University of Texas wouldn't be the first to ban tobacco campus-wide: The Daily Texan notes that other branches of the university — UT-Arlington, UT-Brownsville and the UT Health Science Center in San Antonio — have already implemented the rule. Austin Community College, Huston-Tillotson University and Texas State University have banned tobacco use as well.
The university is applying for $88 million more from the institution this year. Stipulation for consideration: Campus must be tobacco-free by March 1.
And the UT Student Government had already resolved to push for a smoke-free campus over a period of seven years, in spite of opposition by university president William Powers Jr.
Adrienne Howarth-Moore, UT's director of human resource services, told the Austin-American Statesman that "any enforcement strategy will center on education, not-wrist-slapping," saying that the university will avoid fining those who break the rules and will continue to offer initiatives such as free smoking-cessation classes.
In the ban on smoking, how far is too far? How fast is too fast?

The estate is owned by Round Rock Donuts founders. Photo courtesy of Twist Tours Real Estate Photography