|
Restaurant Related News
Man Suffers Coronary After Testifying That Risk From Tobacco Smoke is "Baloney"
"I sat at a table of smokers every morning...and it hasn't bothered my health any."
By: Joe Cherner Source: Parts excerpted from Anchorage Daily News
Published: Wednesday, November 26, 2003
HOMER, Alaska - A local businessman
who had just finished testifying against a proposed smokefree ordinance
collapsed with a heart attack in the council chambers and could not be
revived.
Robert Keys, a former smoker, told a packed city council
meeting that he sat at a table of smokers every morning for coffee and
conversation at a local restaurant without trouble. "It hasn't bothered my
health any," Keys testified. In fact Keys, a veteran, said he'd just had an
echocardiogram about six weeks ago at the hospital at Elmendorf Air Force Base.
"They told me I had the heart of a very young person. So I think all this
baloney about tobacco smoke affecting people's health is just that.
Baloney."
Keys returned to his seat in the council chambers. Less than
five minutes later, gasping noises from Keys interrupted further testimony. The
room was cleared and emergency help summoned.
Among those at the meeting
were the city fire chief, head EMT, and a doctor. Attempts to resuscitate Keys
en route to the hospital were unsuccessful. He was pronounced dead of cardiac
arrest in the emergency room at South Peninsula Hospital, Homer Fire Chief Bob
Painter said.
The council meeting was recessed until next
week.
Keys told the council he had started smoking when he was 8 and
quit when he was 35. Keys was active in local government affairs. Several years
ago, he ran unsuccessfully for the city council.
"Bob actively voiced
his concerns for city government over the years. He was strong in his beliefs,"
said Mayor Jack Cushing, who was chairing the meeting.
The council
recessed Monday before it ever got around to introducing the controversial
smokefree ordinance. Cushing estimated that at least 30 people had come to
testify about the measure. It is scheduled to be taken up with other council
business when the meeting resumes on Monday.
"It's a shocking, horrible
tragedy," said Annette Marley, who attended Monday's meeting for the Homer
Alliance for Fresh Air. "We can't make a casual relationship between his being
around smokers and his death, but we know you have a 30 percent higher risk of
dying of chronic heart disease if you're a nonsmoker exposed to smoke in the
workplace."
|