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Jump to full article: Inside Higher Ed (blog), 2009-12-09 Author: Dean Dad
Intro: A regular correspondent stumped me with this one. Has your campus found a solution to smoking?
With record enrollments, my college has cigarette butts all over the grounds. There's a strong no-smoking policy inside the buildings, and so far, that hasn't really been an issue. Even the bathrooms have been remarkably smoke-free. The outdoors is another story. Smokers are supposed to stand x number of feet away from entrances, but in practice, they seem to interpret that part of the policy as advisory. That can mean that those of us who don't smoke (hi!) get to fight our way through a cloud of carcinogens to enter a building. . . .
It's fine to support smoking cessation programs for both employees and students, but by definition, those only reach the folks who are inclined to quit anyway. The problem is the conflict between the folks who just have to puff away on a regular basis, and those of us who'd rather not breathe carcinogenic air or step on the butts.
Wise and worldly readers, I'm hoping someone has seen this done right. Have you seen it? . . .
* Posted by Allen Edwards , President at Pellissippi State Community College on December 10, 2009 at 7:15am EST
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Pellissippi State in Knoxville, Tn, has enforced a "tobacco-free campus" policy for the past three years with great success. Tobacco use is permitted in the parking lots which ring the campus, but once you are on the campus, it is not permitted.
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