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Smoking ban
Following the news of the soon to be introduced ban of smoking in public, i wonderd if it will apply to workplaces. I work in a factory that recently built an enclosed smoking room in our canteen. Will smokers still be able to use that or will they have to go outside please?
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No best answer has yet been selected by druiaghtagh. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I am giving up smoking. This is my 6th week of not smoking now but I do not agree with a complete ban.
The thing that worries me is the ban in private clubs. By description they are private, not public, and people pay a membership fee to join. They dont have to join. I am not one to go on about civil liberties but just where does the governments encroachment on our private lives stop.
Workplaces are a different matter because all, or nearly all, of the people dont have a choice but to work in that environment.
Another six weeks when I have started smoking again I will probably start banging on about not having a ban at all.
What about the revenue from fags?People will cut down.Where I worked they had a seperate smoking room and I smoked at that time.It was disgusting with the result I didnt have my first one until 8 at night once I was organised.I didnt miss it.I havent smoked for a few years and wont again.
I do agree that it should be a blanket ban - ie smoke in the street or in a house.That way there would be no confusion.
I can understand where the smokers are coming from in a way because its almost like having your security blanket ripped away and you dont know how you will cope without it.You will.Non-smokers in the main have put up and shut up so at last some consideration is being given to everyone.
I'm just worried about how many jobs will be lost and business closed as a result of this. I smoke - I'd rather I didn't, but I do, and I do actually enjoy some of my cigarettes rather than smoke through addiction.
It is a habit of mine to enjoy a pint, something to eat, and a few ciggies in the pub when I finish work, but if I don't have the freedom to smoke, chances are I - like many - won't go in the pub any more. It could be argued that the ban will protect those employed in pubs and that from harm, but if there is no pub, they will have no job.
And what about all the tobacconists? - chances are some will just give up completely (OK, I know that's the aim of anti smoking groups...) but that's just going to hit the shops financially, and some won't survive.
Leaving people with a choice was far better - there are plenty of no smoking areas to choose from.