We just had the choice between two laws like this in Ohio.
The first was sponsored by the tobacco companies and would have banned smoking in all public places, except restaurants and bars with a separate non-smoking section. This was a constitutional amendment, and was actually weaker than the smoking ban Toledo currently has (which is a total joke). It didn't define how separate the smoking area had to be - my favorite bar is basically one big room, half of it is smoking and the other half is not. The whole bar is smoke-filled.
The second was a complete ban on smoking in public places. Certain exceptions existed for places like tobacco shops, etc.
If both passed, the first ban would have invalidated the second ban because it was a constitutional amendment.
Voters turned down the weaker ban and voted for the stronger ban. The stronger ban isn't currently being enforced because there's no final decision on fines/etc for it. That's expected to come sometime in April or May. Businesses are openly flaunting that they're going to ignore it and have started a legal battle to get it overturned.
The first was sponsored by the tobacco companies and would have banned smoking in all public places, except restaurants and bars with a separate non-smoking section. This was a constitutional amendment, and was actually weaker than the smoking ban Toledo currently has (which is a total joke). It didn't define how separate the smoking area had to be - my favorite bar is basically one big room, half of it is smoking and the other half is not. The whole bar is smoke-filled.
The second was a complete ban on smoking in public places. Certain exceptions existed for places like tobacco shops, etc.
If both passed, the first ban would have invalidated the second ban because it was a constitutional amendment.
Voters turned down the weaker ban and voted for the stronger ban. The stronger ban isn't currently being enforced because there's no final decision on fines/etc for it. That's expected to come sometime in April or May. Businesses are openly flaunting that they're going to ignore it and have started a legal battle to get it overturned.