School board signs anti-smoking resolution

PINE PLAINS — While overshadowed by the crowd of upset parents waiting in turn to voice their dissent on the board’s plans to reconfigure the school district, members of the school’s SADD (Students Against Destructive Decisions) club nonetheless made their mark at the Board of Education meeting Feb. 4. They gave an “excellent presentation,� according to district Superintendent Linda Kaumeyer, on the ill-effects that tobacco companies and their products are producing in today’s culture.

SADD is held in conjunction with Reality Check, an organization sponsored by the New York State Health Department. Led by former student Melissa Bartolomeo, who said she was asked to bring Reality Check to the school district’s SADD chapter, said she and members of the club were fighting for teens to make healthy decisions and to “expose the truth� about tobacco companies.

The presentation covered many of the ways that Reality Check feels the tobacco industry continues to violate the Master Settlement Agreement, which placed restriction on practices by tobacco companies, including advertising. The agreement also required companies to provide compensation for the cost of health care for persons with smoking-related illnesses.

Reality Check proposed that the school board sign an agreement that would, among other things, ban magazines from the library that contained tobacco advertisements. SADD members reported that they looked through every magazine in the library, and every single coupon for tobacco products included in the advertisements had been removed by students.

Members of Reality Check also reported they had visited 35 local convenience stores asking them to remove some of their advertising. Sixty-five percent have agreed since last spring.

Part of the agreement that the club presented was that the Board of Education should declare its opposition to cigarette ads in movies, which members said accounted for a large number of teen smokers.

The board eventually signed the agreement, which BOE President Helene McQuade said was very well written and presented. She commended Reality Check and SADD on their activism.

The school district isn’t the only place that Reality Check has recently visited. At the Jan. 15 Town Board meeting the group made a similar presentation and the board unanimously passed a resolution supporting smoke-free movies.

“We tend not to do resolutions on a national level, but I thought that this was a worthwhile and a good thing,� town Supervisor Gregg Pulver said at the time.

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