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Monday, April 30, 2012

Maryland redqueen

  • Statewide smoking ban: On February 1, 2008, the Maryland Clean Indoor Air Act of 2007 went into effect, 
  • banning smoking in all public transportation vehicles, 
  • enclosed public places, 
and enclosed workplaces, including bars, 
  • restaurants, 
  • and private clubs. 
  • The Act exempts private residences and vehicles while not being used as a childcare or healthcare facility, 
  • designated hotel/motel smoking rooms, 
  • retail tobacco stores, 
  • $10-$20 off all Jabra / GN Netcom Headsets!other tobacco-related workplaces such as importers and distributors, facilities where smoking research is conducted, psychiatric facilities, long-term care facilities, hospitals where a doctor has authorized a patient to smoke, and any business that has applied for and received a waiver allowing smoking (though all waivers expire on January 1, 2011). Local governments may regulate smoking more strictly than the state, though not less strictly.
Wiki Smoking Ban Maryland   

Excise tax per pack $2,00 in Maryland
Maryland
Webehigh


All of Maryland's enclosed workplaces, including restaurants, bars, 


and private clubs, are 100% smokefree as of February 1, 2008.
Vtech Cordless Phones - 10% Off & Free Shipping!Maryland's statewide smokefree 


victory followed years of hard work to enact strong smokefree laws at the local level, 


which covered 50% of Maryland's population, including laws in Montgomery County,


Howard County, Prince George's County, Takoma Park, Kensington, Baltimore and Rockville. Going smoke free 






On May 10, 2011, Maryland became the 15th state (16th, including the District of Columbia) to legalize medicinal marijuana when Governor Martin 
O’Malley (D) signed Senate Bill (SB) 308 into law. However, despite being ‘legal’ in technical terms, patients can still be arrested and fined for using their medicine, as reported by medi-pot activist group Americans for Safe Access.   
The Maryland General Assembly previously passed SB 308 in April with the intention 


of augmenting the state’s current ‘medical marijuana affirmative defense’ law passed in 2003, 


the Maryland Darrel Putnam Compassionate Act.


FactoryOutletStore.com - Free Shipping on Brand Name Electronics at Factory Prices! That law only allows for medical necessity defense in court – patients could still receive a misdemeanor conviction on their records as well as a $100 fine. High times Maryland Liberty

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