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PUBLIC POLICY

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Smoke-Free Housing Public Policy in Minnesota

How Did We Get Here?

As more scientific data on the dangers of second and thirdhand smoke exposure in residential multi-unit housing becomes available, the need for strong smoke-free housing protections has become more clear. Multi-unit housing residents are demanding smoke-free housing and cities and counties are beginning to take action to protect their residents from exposure. This page contains background information, tools, and resources to help jurisdictions considering public policy actions. Please contact Live Smoke Free with questions. 

Policy Options

A variety of policy options are available to jurisdictions wishing to protect residents from secondhand smoke in multi-unit housing. Contact Live Smoke Free to learn more about considerations and benefits of these different smoke-free housing policy approaches.

 

Incentives

Many, but not all, municipalities require that rental properties be licensed through the city. This approach would create incentives (such as promotions or discounted fees) for a property to have a smoke-free policy. Jurisdictions can also Incentivize multi-unit residences to go smoke free by establishing a city or county fund to support implementation and maintenance or by adopting a municipal resolution or declaration.

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Disclosure

A disclosure policy requires property owners to disclose to potential renters or prospective buyers the policy on smoking for the building, complex, and unit, and whether the policy is smoking permitted or smoking restricted.

 

Requirement

This policy approach uses a city or county ordinance to require that multi-unit residential buildings have a smoke-free policy. This policy requires a thoughtful approach to minimize any unintended negative effects that could disproportionately impact Black, Indigenous, people of color, and low-income residents. See below to learn more about an equity and housing stability-based model smoke-free housing ordinance.

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Image by Brandon Griggs

Support for Smoke-Free Housing

Minnesota surveying shows strong support for these policies. According to surveys conducted by Live Smoke Free and partners beginning in 2017, renters in Bloomington, Edina, Eden Prairie, Ramsey County, Brooklyn Park, and West St. Paul favor smoke-free policies, including disclosure policies and citywide requirements. Below is a snapshot of key takeaways from these surveys. To view the complete data, visit our research page.

Exposure to Secondhand Tobacco Smoke

Community
Number of Responses
% of residents who reported exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke
Burnsville

221

57%

Edina

458

46%

West St. Paul

230

53%

Brooklyn Park

287

54%

Eden Prairie

256

49%

Bloomington

510

56%

Ramsey County

239

46%

Exposure to Secondhand Cannabis Smoke

Community
# of Responses
% of Residents who Reported Exposure to Secondhand Cannabis Smoke
Burnsville

221

57%

Edina

NA

NA

West St. Paul

230

37%

Brooklyn Park

NA

NA

Eden Prairie

NA

NA

Bloomington

NA

NA

Ramsey County

NA

NA

Support for Smoke-Free Building Policies

Community
# of Responses
% of Residents who would Support a Smoke-Free Policy for their Building
Burnsville

77

84%

Edina

458

94%

West St. Paul

70

73%

Brooklyn Park

144

64%

Eden Prairie

75

82%

Bloomington

378

78%

Ramsey County

224

73%

Support for Smoke-Free Disclosure Ordinances

Community
# of Responses
% of Residents who would Support a Smoking Disclosure Ordinance
Burnsville

221

87%

Edina

NA

NA

West St. Paul

230

91%

Brooklyn Park

NA

NA

Eden Prairie

NA

NA

Bloomington

NA

NA

Ramsey County

477

91%

Support for Smoke-Free Housing Ordinances (Requiring Smoke-Free Housing Citywide)

Community
# of Responses
% of Residents who would Support a Smoke-Free Housing Ordinance
Burnsville

221

73%

Edina

458

91%

West St. Paul

230

75%

Brooklyn Park

287

68%

Eden Prairie

256

85%

Bloomington

579

67%

Ramsey County

239

78%

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Municipal Smoke-Free Housing Ordinances and Resolutions in Minnesota

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Pictured left: The St. Paul City Council voted in 2021 to require the disclosure of smoking policies in common interest communities.

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“Residents of Saint Paul condos demanded this change in policy, after being impacted by secondhand smoke in their own homes,” said Noecker, who authored the ordinance. “This policy provides buyers the information they need to make an informed decision about the home they purchase.”

Image by mike nguyen

Developing an Equity-Focused Model Smoke-Free Housing Ordinance for Minnesota

In 2020, after years of community engagement and surveying, the City of Bloomington, Minnesota began exploring the adoption of an equity-centered smoke-free housing (SFH) ordinance focused on health and housing security for all residents.

Bloomington Public Health, the Association for Nonsmokers-Minnesota’s Live Smoke Free program, and the Public Health Law Center, with funding from Blue Cross Blue Shield of MN and the Minnesota Department of Health’s Statewide Health Improvement Partnership (SHIP), formed a partnership to explore what an equity-centered SFH ordinance approach could look like for the City of Bloomington, MN.

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Partnership Goals: 

  • Conduct stakeholder engagement and community education about smoke-free housing.

  • Create an “Equitable Enforcement Advisory Committee” to help guide and inform policy creation, including enforcement protocol.

  • Create a draft model policy that centers equity and housing security for all residents.

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Lessons Learned

  • Significant investment in community education and engagement is imperative to promote compliance, including a delayed implementation period.

  • Policy violations should not involve law enforcement or a criminal process, but instead provide civil remedies that differ for residents and property managers.

  • The policy should be comprehensive (eg. cover all units) but allow for an optional outdoor designated smoking area if desired.

  • Enforcement by a Community Response Team led by public health staff is preferred.

  • An option to participate in community service and restorative justice should be offered in lieu of a civil fine.

  • Fines for residents should be avoided and, if used, should be based on ability to pay.

  • Eviction is viewed as a last resort for property managers and should only be allowed after graduated enforcement practices have been followed giving the resident an opportunity to remedy.

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Project Poster

To learn more about this work, view our conference poster presented at the National Conference on Tobacco or Health in 2022: “Achieving Equity in Smoke-Free Housing: How a Social Justice Approach Shaped a Model Smoke-Free Housing Ordinance

Model Smoke-Free Housing Ordinance for Minnesota

The final result of this work is an equity-focused model smoke-free housing ordinance for Minnesota. Contact Live Smoke Free to discuss how this model ordinance can be utilized in your community.

Model Smoking Policy Disclosure for Multi-Unit Housing Ordinance for Minnesota

This model ordinance represents a balance among best public health policy practices, advancing health equity, and practicality for local governments in Minnesota. Contact Live Smoke Free to discuss how this model ordinance can be utilized in your community.

Bloomington, MN Smoke-Free Housing Videos

Live Smoke-Free in your Apartment (for renters)
The Benefits of Going Smoke Free for your Property (for property owners/managers)
Healthier, Cleaner, Safer Apartments: Smoke-Free Housing (for decision makers)
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Webinars

Upcoming

Check back for upcoming webinars.

Previous

Exploring Key Elements of an Equity-Focused Smokefree Multiunit Housing Model Ordinance
Presented on May 25, 2023

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Public Health Law Center staff, Rachel Callanan and Marisa Katz, provided a 45-minute overview of key elements of the recently released Minnesota Smoke-free Multiunit Housing Model Ordinance. This comprehensive model builds on the Center’s experience working on previous iterations of a California model, years of experience in supporting communities and individuals with smoke-free housing policies, and an intensive three-year national stakeholder process described in the January 25, 2023 webinar.

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Health equity requires that any policy that purports to protect health must address unintended negative effects that disproportionately harm Black, Indigenous, people of color, low-income, and other priority populations. This model ordinance was constructed with the aim of protecting the health of all residents, while not jeopardizing residents’ housing stability.

​

Presenters

  • Rachel Callanan, JD, MNM, Lead Senior Staff Attorney

  • Marisa Katz, JD, Staff Attorney

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Equity in Smoke-Free Housing: How a Social Justice Approach Shaped a Model Smoke-Free Housing Ordinance
Presented on January 25, 2023

This 60 minute panel discussion features members of an Equitable Enforcement Advisory Committee who collaborated in a multi-year project to draft a new model ordinance for smoke-free multiunit housing. The group’s primary goal was to prioritize residents’ perspectives and promote housing stability. While committee members agreed that an ordinance would protect residents from second- and thirdhand smoke exposure, they were also concerned about potential unintended consequences of ordinance enforcement, including resident displacement or eviction, housing insecurity, and unfair discriminatory enforcement practices and impacts. This multidisciplinary panel will explore key decision points and share important lessons learned as the group balanced residents’ different needs while shaping a model smoke-free multiunit housing ordinance.

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Panelists

• Natasha Phelps, JD, Center for Black Health and Equity
• Michael Scott, Center for Black Health and Equity
• Bridgett Simmons, JD, National Housing Law Project
• Kara Skahen, MSW MPP, Association for Nonsmokers—Minnesota
• Kate Ebert, MPH CHES, City of Bloomington

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Moderator

Marisa Katz, JD, Public Health Law Center

Resources and Fact Sheets

Sample: Incorporating Smoke-Free Housing in Local Comprehensive Planning – Dakota County, MN (2016)

Implementing and Enforcing a Smoke-Free Multi-Unit Housing Ordinance: A Fact Sheet for Local Jurisdictions- Changelab Solutions.

Disclosure of Smoking Policies in Multi-Unit Housing – Public Health Law Center (2021)

Regulating Smoking in Multi-Unit Housing – Public Health Law Center (2021)

Smoke-Free Multi-Unit Housing Enforcement Guide (CA) – Public Health Law Center (2022)

Minnesota Smoke-Free Multi-Unit Housing Model Ordinance – Public Health Law Center (2023)

For Cities: Social Media Toolkit to Promote Smoke-Free Housing (2025)

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Webinar: Health Equity Through Smoke-Free Multi-Unit Housing – Public Health Law Center (2020)

Marijuana in Multi-Unit Residential Settings – Public Health Law Center (2019)

Principles for Equitable Smoke-Free Multifamily Housing – California Healthy Housing Coalition (2024)

Smoke-Free Housing Ordinances for MN Multi-Unit Housing Factsheet (2024)

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List of Currently Enacted Laws

U.S. Laws and Policies Restricting or Prohibiting Smoking Multi-Unit Housing – Americans for Nonsmokers Rights.

Minnesota State and Federal Smoke-Free Housing Laws

Research

Smoke-Free Policies and Resident Turnover: An Evaluation in Massachusetts Public Housing From 2009‒2018

Evaluating the Impact of a Citywide Smoke-Free Multiunit Housing Ordinance: Insights from Community Stakeholders- American Journal of Public Health.

Smoke-Free Multi-Unit Housing Ordinances: Lessons From California – Brynna Bargfield, MPP/MPH Candidate 2021, University of Minnesota

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651-646-3005

2395 University Ave West, Ste 310
St. Paul, MN 55114

 

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ABOUT US

Live Smoke Free is a non-profit program of the Association for Nonsmokers-Minnesota (ANSR) that promotes smoke-free policies in apartment buildings, condominiums, and other forms of housing. We educate building owners, managers, local policy makers, residents, and housing industry professionals about the benefits of smoke-free multi-housing.


Live Smoke Free assists owners and managers with creating, enforcing and promoting a smoke-free policy for their property. We also help renters find solutions to secondhand smoke problems and provide technical assistance to smoke-free housing programs. We offer free assistance throughout Minnesota and can provide some free resources and assistance to out-of-state entities, including public housing agencies.


Live Smoke Free is supported by grant funding and charitable donations. 

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