Not many if any companies are gonna pay you to sit around vaping or smoking, those are things you do on your own time. If you don't like it don't work there.
If it actually interfered with getting stuff done, we would have never gotten to the moon 45 years ago:
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In fact, it seems we stopped getting this done as a country right around the time that smoking bans came into the workplace. Now who seems to be able to "get things done" today? The Chinese -- and they still smoke like fiends while working. Coincidence?
Not many if any companies are gonna pay you to sit around vaping or smoking, those are things you do on your own time. If you don't like it don't work there.
Here in CO years back indoor smoking in public places was banned. The general manager at my job had an outdoor smoking covered patio built for smoking on. Had the manager not been a smoker himself I dont know if such measures would have been followed. 10 years or so have passed and He is gone but the policy still remains. Long story short the mindset of management is what dictates the policy and no smoking/vaping on the property is a statement that doesnt lend to an equal opportunity employer. To fight the policy will be an uphill battle. Quit vaping or find new job are your two choices.
I believe the problem with vaping in the workplace is that just like most other things in life, the few would quickly ruin it for the many.
At my last job, smoking was allowed on the campus but only in designated areas. The problem was that many smokers did not keep it to the designated areas, and even when they did, they consistently trashed them up with butts being thrown everywhere, as well as empty cigarette packs, etc. Needless to say, the campus is now "no smoking".
As far as vaping in the workplace, I think most vapers would be respectful and use common sense, but not all....and that's where the problem comes in.
So, no harm in questioning or challenging.
what do you charge for rent?
if i were your employee it would be on the terms that i get a fan in my window or i quit. then i'd pose (correctly) the fact that i'm using air that belongs to nobody (can't even be considered public since not even the gooberment owns it).
i know i'd be embarrassed in court as an employer arguing against said logic to suppress my employees.
Please! smoking bans have nothing to do with litter. They are the result of militant activism by anti-smoker puritan extremists who want to punish others for enjoying life. It also fits with the demonization and marginalization doctrine established by TC years ago. Smoking bans are a policy of hate, nothing to do with health, respect, or littler.
IDK in the context of this thread I find it harmful to challenge assuming you agreed to work wherever and agreed to the statutes of the job, which everyone obviously did based on the evidence of receiving a paycheck. If something like this is challenged and successful I find it to be in a category like "squatters rights" ect. and consider this harmful to property rights.
On the other hand if you don't work in my establishment and wish to protest outside on the public sidewalk, I fully support that and I would not even support the local municipality in requiring permits for such a protest.
Did you also work at my last place of employment? If not, how in the world would you know exactly why they banned smoking? I won't and can't speak for other employers, but I can tell you that the reason it was banned at my work was because it became a problem with cigarette butts all over the place, as well as smokers not restricting themselves to the designated smoking areas. In short, management became tired of dealing with it, and as a result, took the easy way out and banned it.Please! smoking bans have nothing to do with litter. They are the result of militant activism by anti-smoker puritan extremists who want to punish others for enjoying life. It also fits with the demonization and marginalization doctrine established by TC years ago. Smoking bans are a policy of hate, nothing to do with health, respect, or littler.
Rampant Antismoking Signifies Grave Danger
http://www.express.co.uk/comment/co...rry-Not-if-the-health-puritans-have-their-way
Without getting into the question of whether SHS is actually bad for your health, a lot of nonsmokers find being around it unpleasant. They don't like the smell and for some it causes coughing. That's at least part of the reason for the bans. I don't think it's appropriate to write those people's opinions off. And for ex-smokers it's painful for a different reason.
If we tell them they need to just live with it because smokers like doing it, they are going to see that as selfish and inconsiderate. My mother used to send my father and grandfather out to the garage to smoke their pipes, and that was before anyone even considered smoking to be bad for your health, never mind second hand smoke.
There may be "anti-smoker puritan extremists who want to punish others for enjoying life" out there, but that's not all that's going on. If you had won the battle and the rules said that it was OK to smoke at work or anywhere else, there would be people on the losing side who would call you equally ugly names.
In the context of this thread, this was put upon the employee the day after they were hired.
Nevertheless, if an employer makes a rule about something in their business, I observe it as their rule, their right. But am yet to see the harm in questioning or challenging the rule, especially if there is reasoning involved. Your only counter argument that I've seen is that if I challenged you, and you were my employer, I'd be embarrassed. Like that would stop me, or any reasonable person.
It's all good towelie. I was just ribbin' ya.Its not about suppressing anyone and you as a person who asks about this policy specifically should know that. Anyone like you would be the exception. Of course anything negotiated individually would be respected as contract. Actually as an employer I could not care less about vaping or how many unscheduled "breaks" you might take yada yada as long as you meet or exceed expectations.
What I am saying however is that if I had a no vaping policy in my establishment that you agreed to from the beginning and challenged it that just would not end well for you. A contract is a contract and we would not make it to court as there is zero standing for you as an employee who signed the contract to work and all workplace policies were explained to you before you began employment. In your example above that is not the case as you had a separate contract regarding the specific issue. I would be embarrassed as an employer trying to re-neg on this contract also; the suppression you mention.
I do own the air in my establishment in the sense that if you are a customer that has not bathed or crapped your pants and insist in being inside I will make you leave because I don't want to smell you. If you smoke inside you are going to leave because its my air and I don't smoke; weather I am "open to the public" or am private establishment. If you are my employee and have hygiene issues that aren't medical problems then you will address them or you will seek employment elsewhere because its my air and I don't like the smell of you, sorry. Likewise I can require your hairstyle be cut a certain way, facial hair included and noncompliance will result in termination, this would fall under uniform policy that you agreed to pre-employment. I can have a no cologne or perfume policy as well if I like, my air.
If you negotiated a fan at "your" window you could correctly pose that I am a cool employer and that you are a 1%er that reads all fine print. As a vaper and former smoker if I were an employer I can tell you that no such contract between us would be necessary but we could put it in writing if you wish. If I were a small non-corporate business I would welcome your individuality in general and with respect to your employment terms, as a corporate employer though there's just not room for that and the market would just provide another candidate that would comply. It's just supply and demand.
TL;DR
Your position stated above has a unique, specific contract attached to this issue. My position assumed you agreed to terms of employment as is.
Smoking policy is the prerogative of the property owner or current occupant. Outside interference within this space is unconstitutional in the US, a dangerous trespass against individual rights, and a very steep slippery slope towards Orwellian control of people's behavior, actions, even thoughts.
On the technical side, good ventilation would've taken care of most busybody complainers, while the rest could simply choose to shop or work elsewhere, with policies more suited to their own personal sensibilities.
What's unacceptable is the demonization of some 20% of the population (44million US smokers) and the continuing abuse of their human rights in all aspects of society because of legal choices they make. Soon smokers will be denied the right to healthcare, housing, employment, free movement, etc. all because fanatical "dogooders" disliked the smell of tobacco.
Dude OK in the context of the thread OP said the same as you, their rule, their right and even hinted at seeking employment elsewhere. Maybe give an example of how you would go about challenging something that you observe as their rule, their right; cause we all know what the answer to questioning their rule, their right is: "that's the rules".