I recently started a new job a few months ago. While i like the job im not too fond of my work environment. I'm currently in a small office with 2 other people. Both these people smoke nonstop throughout the day. Most of my work involves starting at a computer screen and all the smoke is bothering me. I've mentioned a few times that it bothers me around my boss and a good friend who has been here for awhile but im still stuck in this office with smoke all around me.I don't want to quit and I've said several things, maybe i need to be more harsh but i don't want to come across like a dick head. Suggestions on how to deal with this matter and not lose my job.
3/16/2009 9:43:28 AM
i'm pretty sure there are laws for that. "safe working environment" laws or whatever
3/16/2009 9:44:48 AM
Yea, i would either decide if you want to make it an issue or not. If it really bothers you (as it would me) i would approach the boss with some safe working environment angle, or even go to a doctor to get a note saying you are allergic to the cigs.
3/16/2009 9:45:55 AM
if your boss is a good one and agrees with you, the order should come down from his own mouth to the other coworkers and it shouldnt appear to come from you (even if it obviously did)ive made several coworkers quit smoking around me, even got one to go on the patch and the gum, but after 2 months of not working with me they always start again
3/16/2009 9:49:47 AM
the boss smokes. He regularly walks around with a cigar in his mouth.
3/16/2009 9:53:57 AM
Where the fuck do you work? I was under the impression that smoking was generally non existent in any office in America these days.
3/16/2009 9:55:10 AM
my 90 days are coming up. I'll be pretty clear in my 90 review that i don't like the smoking.
3/16/2009 9:58:35 AM
Dude below me smokes in his office, but he owns the building.PS, they probably know you don't like the smoking. They probably don't care.[Edited on March 16, 2009 at 10:05 AM. Reason : +]
3/16/2009 10:04:48 AM
yeah, owner where I work smokes..but he has a huge ass office, keeps his door closed when he does it and has an air purifier thing that he basically blows the smoke into. It does a good job of keeping the smell out of the offices..and he's in a different building than me
3/16/2009 10:06:52 AM
Get a ridiculous gas mask and wear it every time they start smoking.
3/16/2009 10:07:25 AM
^ winner
3/16/2009 10:11:17 AM
^^ winner
3/16/2009 10:22:12 AM
First off, it's 2009. I'm glad to hear that some workplaces are still keeping it real with the smoking.And I don't think there's anything you can do about it. If management is cool with smoking, and you're outnumbered 2 to 1, you don't have much power.Maybe get some eye drops to keep your eyes from drying out with the smoke. Also, a few industrial air filters and the like will help.And write your congressman.
3/16/2009 10:45:28 AM
3/16/2009 10:51:00 AM
3/16/2009 10:51:35 AM
did anyone see ron paul and stephen baldwin (on the other side of the argument, ironically) on larry king? cigarettes are by far the most addictive substance sold to consumersalcohol is probably the most destructiveyet weed is a no-no?
3/16/2009 10:54:01 AM
I'm pretty much staring at php/html code all day and i have two full time smokers within 5 feet of me. It's killing my eyes and gives me a headache.[Edited on March 16, 2009 at 10:59 AM. Reason : ff]
3/16/2009 10:54:12 AM
3/16/2009 10:58:12 AM
i knew before i clicked on this thread that Willy Nilly had posted in here and was a complete douchebag.p.s.
3/16/2009 10:58:33 AM
where do you work, a 1930s newsroom?
3/16/2009 11:00:38 AM
3/16/2009 11:00:46 AM
any office that's a decent place to work will at least restrict smoking to outside and away from entrances.
3/16/2009 11:01:34 AM
yeah, any office that allows smoking INSIDE is guaranteed to be full of assholes...smoking is disgusting, but a lot of smokers, despite their dumb choice, are at least considerate enough to confine it to open air areas where it doesn't affect others nearly as badly
3/16/2009 11:03:20 AM
3/16/2009 11:08:51 AM
3/16/2009 11:11:07 AM
AHA, I got challenged by the pro-freedom-to-smoke crowd and the anti-freedom-to-smoke crowd.SHE'S REASONABLE!!! GET HER!!!!!!!!![Edited on March 16, 2009 at 11:14 AM. Reason : !!!!!!!!!!!]
3/16/2009 11:13:39 AM
you're not reasonable, though.you're batshit nuts.
3/16/2009 11:14:26 AM
^^ i think youre giving yourself WAY too much credit.[Edited on March 16, 2009 at 11:19 AM. Reason : ]
3/16/2009 11:18:09 AM
3/16/2009 11:19:07 AM
3/16/2009 11:23:15 AM
^ 10/10.going to a bar and going to work every day are two entirely different things.]
3/16/2009 11:24:05 AM
^^ win[Edited on March 16, 2009 at 11:27 AM. Reason : ss]
3/16/2009 11:27:06 AM
3/16/2009 11:29:41 AM
3/16/2009 11:32:46 AM
Ask Willy Nilly. I was mocking him.
3/16/2009 11:35:37 AM
i see.
3/16/2009 11:36:06 AM
3/16/2009 11:37:57 AM
3/16/2009 11:48:50 AM
see, that's just it...you can be a parrot and just repeat the same argument against smoking the workplace and still not get it...the FACT is that smokers engage in an activity that HARMS OTHER PEOPLE in a situation like thisthere is no debate regarding this FACT...the very creation of this thread indicates that there are people who, by their voluntary actions, are hurting other peopleeloquent or not, the FACT is that they are infringing upon another person's right to work effectively and safely, end of story
3/16/2009 11:53:21 AM
I'm no parrot.I actually pride myself on not reading very often for that reason.
3/16/2009 12:01:33 PM
3/16/2009 12:04:56 PM
This feels like another of Bridgets pseudo-trolling.
3/16/2009 12:07:25 PM
^ yea i almost got caught in that as well. smokers who spread their filth should die, well at least quicker than the rest of us.
3/16/2009 12:10:18 PM
you're probably right...i think i might have actually just been successfully trolled i sure hope so...i can't think she's that stupid, but it's possible
3/16/2009 12:10:47 PM
3/16/2009 12:20:16 PM
No one mentions case law.Advocates for "smoke-free workplaces" contend that since nonsmokers work in bars and restaurants, and that since even second-hand smoke contains so-called Class A carcinogens that in large doses can cause cancer, people should be entitled to "safe" places wherein to work. In other words, by banning smoking in these places, government simply is protecting the "rights" of workers.On the surface, such arguments may sound good, but when one barely scratches the surface, they not only are specious, but downright dangerous. Such laws amount to a confiscation of property. Whatever governing body makes the ruling is using force to limit behavior that can occur on private property, yet it is the owner who is liable for enforcing the rule—on pain of losing the property and perhaps even his or her freedom. Property owners, who in a free market would be able to decide on their own whether or not they want to permit smoking, have that right taken away from them by the state.One forgets that people who either are employees or patrons of a bar or restaurant are there by choice. To put it another way, those individuals who decide either to work at such an establishment or to eat and drink there freely have made the decision to spend time at that place. No restaurant or bar owner can force anyone to work or eat at his or her establishment, so at best, the state is "rescuing" people from their own free choices, which means that the political authorities—and the activists cheering them on—are in effect also coercing those workers and patrons into making choices that meet state approval.Much has been made of nonsmokers being "victims" of passive smoke created by smokers. Those of us who are nonsmokers on occasions have complained about breathing the smoke of others, to be sure, and there have been times when I have not gone to certain places where people were smoking. However, it is one thing for me to refuse to patronize a place where people are smoking; it is quite another to employ the state as a vehicle to impose my desires upon others.The anti-smoking policies in effect give disaffected persons (along with politicians and activists) de facto property rights, something I pointed out to the activist. His response was as follows: "I think ALL Group A carcinogens should be prohibited in the workplace, to the extent possible." The "Class A Carcinogens" argument, while at first sounding good, is yet another rhetorical trick. According to cancer researchers, tobacco smoke carries the "Class A" carcinogens, and these supposedly also have an effect upon nonsmokers. Given the political motivation of much anti-tobacco research, one must take these results with a very large bag of salt. (For example, the media recently trumpeted a "study" which claimed that smoking bans could cut heart attacks in half. Jacob Sullum of the Reason Foundation clearly debunks that and other studies.However, as I pointed out in my responses, there are many hazards in this world, and his reasoning would give unhappy people an absolute veto power over nearly everything. For example, if one is able to walk into any establishment and demand people stop smoking, would not someone who is offended by "R" rated movies have the right to order the theater to stop showing that particular film? For that matter, all of us are quite aware of the dangers of alcoholic beverages, and if it is dangerous for people to smoke, it certainly can also be dangerous for them to drink.That being the case, one would expect the political authorities to be so concerned about alcohol abuse that they order bars and restaurants to stop serving such beverages, or at least permit anyone to enter a bar and declare that all drinking must be stopped.In fact, if one really wants to get at the source of most cancers, there is the sun. If these public health cancer fighters truly were serious about keeping Americans from being exposed to the dangers of cancer, then they would demand legislation that either would prevent the sun from shining or at least require that we block all windows during the day and venture out only at night, something reminiscent of Frederic Bastiat's "Petition of the Candlemakers."Carcinogens, you see, come in all places, including clothing and carpet. It is nearly impossible to go through life without coming into contact with such things.Thus, the safety issue is nothing more than a red herring, or yet another version of the "Camel's Nose." Anti-tobacco activists most likely will not stop until we have something akin to the 1920s version of Prohibition, this time tobacco being the target, the failures of alcohol and drug bans not affecting them in the least.While many libertarians have fashioned the argument as a contest between the rights of smokers and nonsmokers, it is a mistake to stop there. There are no doubts that conflicting rights exist here, but legislation targeting tobacco use is not the answer. The real issue here is not whether the law will be used as a mediation device between smokers and nonsmokers, but rather the fact that activists are using the state as a vehicle to hijack private property rights and to take choices away from individuals who are quite capable of thinking for themselves."If one abolishes man's freedom to determine his own consumption, one takes all freedoms away," writes Mises. The decision of whether or not to ban smoking on private property should be solely left up to the property owner, period. Furthermore, individuals who choose to work or patronize such places should not be permitted to claim later that secondhand smoke made them sick (and then have a jury make them multimillionaires).For all of the "halo-effect" that supposedly surrounds anti-smoking activists, they are little more than closet thieves. Yes, free speech dictates that they should be able to say what they want in a proper forum. And, yes, private property rights should also dictate that they mind their own business when it comes to the property of others.[Edited on March 16, 2009 at 12:22 PM. Reason : a]
3/16/2009 12:20:45 PM
Would you stop fucking passing off someone else's words as your own trying to look smart to this website?http://mises.org/story/1244For fucks sake man.
3/16/2009 12:29:23 PM
holy god, words!
3/16/2009 12:30:44 PM
^just you wait:
3/16/2009 12:32:17 PM
3/16/2009 1:24:43 PM