No ifs, ands or butts. Smoking is an issue at many federal agencies. A lot of nonsmokers resent giving people time off for what they consider is an unhealthy...
People who smoke at work are definitely in the minority. Agency and local rules limit smoking areas. Often they are close to the entrance to the building. This sometimes irks the smokers, and also nonsmokers, who must pass close to them.
A recent column on the subject prompted a lot of response. Most of it was from people who think the smokers should be moved even further away. Or not given time off during the workday to smoke. But there are people who say smoking is no worse a vice than overeating, or people who text during critical meetings or do unofficial (and sometimes naughty) things on their government computers. Whether you agree or not, check out what the other half thinks:
I don’t understand why there can’t be some small area for smokers on federal property. In driving the smokers out or underground, it leads to less productivity. I work in a facility that is posted no tobacco. So people will get into their cars and drive off campus, this takes more time and wastes more energy. As for the idea that standing outside a building and smoking is totally wasted time, that is BS. That is where I save taxpayer money. I had my little informal network of people from those that take out the trash to some pretty high ranking scientists and administrators. If I needed to get a locksmith, or find an expensive, rare piece of scientific equipment, or find someone from another center or group I could find it through my smoking network. When I ran into an electrical problem, it took me a quick trip to a hardware store on the way home ($12.50) and I was fixed the next day. An identical electrical problem occurred a few years later, it took the other individual over 9 months (and likely thousands of dollars as it had to go out to bid for a contract to fix the issue) going through conventional channels.
“Others have a right not to breath my smoke, that’s fine. But I wonder about the errosion of individual rights and freedom. It appears we are evolving to a “nanny state”, and we will be told what we can and can’t do. I wonder when the fat people will be banned from the cafeteria.”
— a smokin’ Fed
On The Road Again
I’ll be out of town for the next two weeks, first at the huge Federal Dispute Resolution conference, which opens Monday in San Antonio, then off to the National Association of Active and Retired Federal Employees convention in Reno-Sparks, Nev. I hope to see some of you at one or the other (maybe both). If not, I’ll be back (like Congress) after Labor Day.
NEARLY USELESS FACTOID
By Jack Moore and Amanda Iacone
China’s first emperor, whose burial palace is surrounded by terracotta warriors, is believed to have been buried with an additional layer of protection for the afterlife: a moat of mercury allegedly encircles the central burial chamber. That mercury has given archeologists a good excuse not to push the Chinese government to grant permission to excavate the tomb.
You can read more about the emperor, his obsession with mercury and his terracotta soldiers at LiveScience.com
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Mike Causey is senior correspondent for Federal News Network and writes his daily Federal Report column on federal employees’ pay, benefits and retirement.
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