home

A Dark Day in Toronto For Cigar Smokers



Thomas Hinds Tobacconist in TorontoFrom Rich at CigarCyclopedia comes this news:

Another draconian smoking ban goes into effect today in the Canadian province of Ontario, including the formerly cosmopolitan city of Toronto.

“There is a cigar culture in Toronto,” noted Stephen Hajtun, speaking to The Globe and Mail, Canada’s most respected newspaper in an interview last week. Not any more, Stephen.

The ban covers smoking in all enclosed spaces, including retail tobacco stores!

“The impact will be disastrous” was the comment from well-known tobacconist Thomas Hinds, whose store in the Yorkville section of Toronto has been a destination for smokers for 35 years.

Hinds told reporter Paul French, “People come here for a cigar because they don’t want to smoke in front of their kids at home, and that’s what the law is supposed to be about, protecting children, and I’m all for that.“Now we have a situation where [smokers] won’t have a place to go.”

French points out that as many as a dozen smoking lounges will have to close, “putting cigar smokers out on the street, and lumping them in with cigarette smokers, with whom they say they have little in common.” . . .

“The new law may also end up offending non-smokers even more than before.

“Prego Della Piazza, across the street from Casa del Habano, is one of only a few Toronto restaurants where cigar smoking is allowed in a separate dining room. But when the ban comes into effect, cigar smokers will have to move to a patio outside.

“‘Cigar smell always travels and it’s worse outside than inside because it gets carried by wind,’ general manager Vince Carrere said.”

So what should be done? The correct note was sounded by smoker John Perrone while enjoying a cigar in the upstairs lounge at Thomas Hinds:

“The new law has an edge of maliciousness to it. Give us our small corner and we’ll stay there.”

For now, the corner of the room is gone, traded for the street corner.

Toronto just experienced a resurgence of interest in cigars in the late 1990’s, with several cigar bars opening…and thriving. Like New York City and Chicago (and we won’t even talk about La La Land on the West Coast, another major metropolitan area falls victim to propaganda, deliberate misinformation and “doublethink.”

Life in one of my favorite cities has just become a little less civilized, and a lot less free.

Welcome to the New Dark Ages.

Posted on Wednesday, May 31st, 2006 at 8:40 pm.

Possibly Related Products: 

Possibly Related Articles: 
  • How to Roll a Cigar, New York Style
  • Not All the Press Is Negative…
  • Federal Judge May Halt Smoking Ban in Austin
  • Sharing Pre-Embargo Cuban Cigars in Las Vegas
  • Is it Maduro, Double Maduro, or Oscuro?
  • Over 200 Reasons to Never Stay At A Marriott Hotel Again
  • Forbidden Pleasures: The Rebirth of Private Smoking Rooms


  • Possibly Related Links: 
    Tags:  , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

    One Response to “A Dark Day in Toronto For Cigar Smokers”


    1. jcruz
      June 1st, 2006 21:33
      1

      Sadly this seems to be the way the world is going. Are there no exemptions? For instance here in Washington DC a business is exempt if 25% or more of its sales come from tobacco products so our local B&M can still be a haven for smokers.

    Leave a Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.








    TechnoratiTechnorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

    Site Search


    Sponsored Links

    Your Ad Here

    Visitor Map

    Locations of visitors to this page

    Author

    • To learn more about Jeffrey Beckwith, click About Me.

    Currently on Ebay

    Special

    Also on Ebay

    CigarEnvy E-List

    Cigar deals, special offers and bargain prices. Free-wheeling discussion, tips, recommendations —and warnings— about online dealers and retailers.

      
      

    Powered by groups.yahoo.com
    Visit CigarEnvy Group