State may bring back the cigar bar, smoking rooms

FIFE — In the years since Washington voters approved a statewide smoking ban nearly a decade ago, Daniel Shaw and his cigars have wandered a state thin on options for places to light up and smoke.

Shaw can be found a couple of nights a week perched at the upstairs bar of a tribal casino in Fife, a 10-minute drive from Tacoma and a rare haven to enjoy a pricey cigar in the company of other smokers. Never mind the gambling in the rest of the building.

“I just really gravitated here because of the fact this is where I could enjoy my passion,” the 64-year-old Tacoma man said over a thick Davidoff cigar and a glass of Dewar’s scotch.

For the fourth time since the smoking ban took effect, Washington state is seeing a movement to give Shaw and fellow cigar lovers state-regulated places to smoke. A bill passed unanimously Thursday by the House Commerce and Gaming Committee would legalize cigar bars and smoking rooms in tobacco shops, allowing 115 new venues to smoke pipes and cigars.

Proponents say the state would gain tax money and give users of a legal, controlled substance a place to use what they’re buying. Opponents see an immense public health concern and a betrayal of the voters who passed the smoking ban in 2005.

“It’s a bad idea,” said Rep. Eileen Cody, D-West Seattle. “They’re basically trying to get around the Clean Indoor Air Act that was supported by a wide margin.”

Cody chairs the House Health Care and Wellness community and helped thwart earlier House bills to allow cigar bars. Cody said she plans to oppose the latest attempt to make Washington the 36th state to legalize cigar bars, possibly by bringing the bill into her committee for review.

“Somebody’s going to be working there, and they’re going to be exposed to it,” Cody said.

Nebraska also has a cigar bar bill before its state legislature this year. Several other states have no laws prohibiting such places, said Craig Williamson, president of the Cigar Association of America.

“We’ve been trying for the last few years to get cigar lounges back,” Williamson said.

His Washington, D.C.-based industry group has spent more than $200,000 lobbying in Olympia in the last three years, state records show.

Periodic attempts to carve a cigar lounge niche into the state smoking ban have come and gone without leaving much of a mark. A 2008 effort to put an initiative on the ballot didn’t get enough signatures. Bills in 2011 and 2013 died without a House floor vote. Rep. Brandon Vick, R-Felida, sponsors this year’s version, which is less ambitious than its predecessors. The previous bill would have allowed 100 bars and 500 smoking rooms, this year’s effort would create 40 and 75, respectively.

The bill requires employees who might come into contact with tobacco smoke to sign an acknowledgment, and it forbids businesses from punishing those who refuse. Vick, who is a contractor, wrote detailed requirements for the ventilation systems a building would need before receiving a license for tobacco use.

“Some of these places, with the technology today, you’re going to be able to walk in and not know you’re in one,” Vick told the Commerce and Gaming Committee.

Dr. Anthony Chen, the Pierce County Director of Health, disputed that claim and said tobacco smoke can seep out of rooms.

“This bill has some very impressive-sounding technical specifications, but they do not work,” he said.

Visits to two establishments where cigars can be smoked in public, Smokey Joe’s Cigars and Sports Lounge in a Fife casino and Brown and Sons Premium Cigars in Olympia, a shop staffed by its owners with a back room for members, found the air thick with pungent smoke and devotees who say they’re drawn to mix their smoking with socializing.

“It’s definitely everyday people,” said Brown and Sons member Keith Brown, 52, an Olympia business owner who is not related to the shop owners, though the camaraderie of their rare cigars-only lounge makes it feel otherwise.

The intimacy forced by a standing ban on all but a few smoking refuges does have detractors among the cigar crowd. Joe Arundel, owner of Rain City Cigars in Seattle and president of the Cigar Association of Washington, backs the drive for cigar bars. A smoking room would let him sell customers on varieties. He compared it to a cheese shop handing out small samples.

“Cigars are a legal product, yet we’re not allowed to sample it in the cigar shop,” Arundel said. “Sort of contrary to doing business, y’think?”

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Local News

Olivia Vanni / The Herald 
The Mukilteo Lighthouse. Built in 1906, it’s one of the most iconic landmarks in Snohomish County.
The Mukilteo Lighthouse. Built in 1906, it’s one of the most iconic landmarks in Snohomish County. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Mukilteo mayor vetoes council-approved sales tax

The tax would have helped pay for transportation infrastructure, but was also set to give Mukilteo the highest sales tax rate in the state.

South County Fire plans push-in ceremony for newest fire engine

Anybody who attends will have the opportunity to help push the engine into the station.

Marysville Mayor Jon Nehring gives the state of the city address at the Marysville Civic Center on Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2024, in Marysville, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Marysville council approves interim middle housing law

The council passed the regulations to prevent a state model code from taking effect by default. It expects to approve final rules by October.

Stolen fire engine smashes signs, trees and 14 parked vehicles in North Everett

There were no injuries, but the suspect, who abandoned the vehicle and fled on foot, is still at large.

Bothell
Bothell man pleads guilty to sexual abuse of Marysville middle schoolers

The man allegedly sexually assaulted three students in exchange for vapes and edibles in 2022. His sentencing is set for Aug. 29.

Larsen talks proposed Medicaid cuts during Compass Health stop in Everett

Compass Health plans to open its new behavioral health center in August. Nearly all of the nonprofit’s patients rely on Medicaid.

Skylar Maldonado, 2, runs through the water at Pacific Rim Plaza’s Splash Fountain, one of the newer features add to the Port of Everett waterfront on Tuesday, July 15, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
CEO: Port of Everett pushes forward, despite loomimg challenges from tariffs

CEO Lisa Lefeber made the remarks during the annual port report Wednesday.

Community members gather for the dedication of the Oso Landslide Memorial following the ten-year remembrance of the slide on Friday, March 22, 2024, at the Oso Landslide Memorial in Oso, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
The Daily Herald garners 6 awards from regional journalism competition

The awards recognize the best in journalism from media outlets across Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington.

Stock photo
Foundation raised over $55,000 to pay for student school supplies in Stanwood-Camano.
Stanwood area foundation raises more than $55,000 for school supplies

A month-long campaign exceeded its goal to help support elementary students in the Stanwood-Camano School District.

District 1 candidates talk financial priorities, student needs

Three newcomers — Carson Sanderson, Arun Sharma and Brian Travis — are eyeing the vacant seat on the district’s board of directors.

Top, from left: Bill Wheeler, Erica Weir and Mason Rutledge. Bottom, from left: Sam Hem, Steven Sullivan.
Candidates seek open District 1 seat in crowded race

Five people are aiming to take the open seat left after current council member Mary Fosse announced she would not run for reelection.

Pia Sampaga-Khim, right, and Jana Rafi, left, demonstrate how a patient check in might go in the Snohomish County Health Department’s new Health on Wheels Van on Wednesday, April 9, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
New federal DEI restrictions on County Health Department funding spurs hiring halt

12 positions were paused for fear of unsustainable funding.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.