KAISERSLAUTERN, Germany – The Air Force is once again tightening rules on tobacco use on its installations, further clarifying where airmen can — or rather, won’t be able to — get their nicotine fix.
New guidance, made public this week, bans tobacco use in all indoor workplaces, Air Force Services facilities, and installation recreational facilities, to include athletic fields, running tracks, basketball courts, golf courses, beaches, marinas and parks. The rules also apply to electronic smoking devices, commonly referred to as e-cigarettes or e-cigs.
The old Air Force Instruction on tobacco use, last revised in 2012, also prohibited tobacco use at all installation recreation facilities, but didn’t specify places such as basketball courts and running tracks. The old guidance also allowed smoking at recreation areas at designated smoking areas. No such exception is written into the new policy.
Also now banned is smoking in privately owned vehicles when the vehicle is occupied by a child under 14 years of age.
One airman, taking a smoke break at RAF Mildenhall, England, on Thursday morning, said he was unaware that the regulation on smoking had changed. After hearing some of the new rules, he said they would not affect him, but he seemed disappointed that the Air Force was making it harder to smoke in outdoor locations.
He pointed out that people on a golf course are usually spread out, but he said he realizes that such rules exist usually because of a few incidents.
“I guess you always need these blanket rules,” said the airman, who asked not to be identified.
The new policy, published internally on March 15, also prohibits special events in services’ facilities that promote tobacco use, such as “Cigar Night,” since such events run counter to “Comprehensive Airman Fitness” and “an Air Force culture of health,” Air Force officials said Wednesday in a news release announcing the changes.
The new AFI, which was signed by Lt. Gen. Thomas Travis, the Air Force surgeon general, notes that “tobacco use degrades Air Force readiness, health, and leads to preventable health care costs” and urges commanders and leaders to promote “tobacco-free living.”
The Air Force emphasized in the news release that electronic cigarettes fall under the same restrictions as conventional cigarettes.
“We define e-cigarettes as a tobacco product because that is how they are defined under the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act,” Col. John Oh, the chief of health promotion for the Air Force Medical Support Agency, was quoted in the release as saying.
Acknowledging that the long-term safety of e-cigarettes is currently unknown, Oh said the Air Force will consider changes to its policy on the devices based on scientific evidence and in consultation with government subject matter experts.
Stars and Stripes reporter Adam Mathis contributed to this article.
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