Teachers Union Up In Arms About… Smoking?

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Teachers Union Up In Arms About… Smoking?


As America’s dumbest generation gets dumber, teachers unions stand as an important stepping stone to educating our youth. Unfortunately, the stepping stones that the unions represent are paving a road to ruin as opposed to one of success. Still, one teachers union in Pennsylvania has used its power to great effect. Sadly, the effect is not one that has anything to do with education. On the bright side, though, at least it is an issue of reinforcing personal liberty.

It seems that Pennsylvania’s colleges and universities decided to ban smoking everywhere on campuses across the Keystone State. Pursuant to that, rules were made and students and teachers alike were told to leave their butts home, no smoking allowed.

The schools made one tiny miscalculation, though. They imagined that the unions would meekly agree to this universal ban and say nothing forcing teachers to stop smoking on the job. The schools were wrong.

The union responded to the schools by saying that the ban was illegitimate for union employees because the school administrators had not negotiated with the union before putting the ban in place. Ooopsie.

So, the union had the ban overturned. Students and teachers alike are overjoyed. Though the ban hasn’t strictly been lifted for students (only union employees) it is a bit hard for the schools to justify keeping adult students at colleges from smoking but allowing their teachers to do so.

That leaves schools such as Clarion, West Chester and Kutztown Universities, among others, with tenuous holds on their smoking bans — much to the delight of smokers like 21-year-old Clarion student Steven Dugan.

“We don’t want to impose our habits on somebody else,” Dugan said. Still, he added, the students wanted everyone else to know it was “our life, our body, our decision…. We weren’t asking for the ability to stand in every doorway to smoke.”

This is the same argument that liberals use to safeguard abortion or, say, drug use, isn’t it? A person may do what they wish with “their body” when it comes to drug use and abortion. Yet they take exactly the opposite stance on smoking. Many liberals are even angling to take the we-know-better-than-you stance on fast food and junk food. So, how does the argument that “it’s our body” work for abortion and drug use, but not for smoking and fast food?

It’s a liberal’s pretzel logic and it’s coming home to bite them in the butts in Pennsylvania. Now, if only we could get a teachers union that cared as much about teaching!


LOL

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I'm just wondering why you hate workers defending themselves webbway? Do you have some special interest in defending corporations? Are you a CEO?
 
wow that was a waste of 10 seconds of my life.
webway just entered the rightwingnut knuckle dragger of the month contest.
 
isn't it amazing how a group that seeks to advocate limiting certain rights of others, yet will go apeshit crazy when it's a restriction that affects them directly?
 
Wow, I had no idea that public college professors were unionized. I can understand college of ed professors being affiliated with the NEA/AFT because they are former teachers who often still do work in the local districts, but this is news to me.
 
No smooking on the entire campus? That is pretty hosed up.

Some of the hospitals here forbid smoking on their property even in the parking lots and such among the exhaust fumes from vehicles.

I put in my living will that I would not be transported to any hospital that prohibited smoking on their entire property.
 
No smooking on the entire campus? That is pretty hosed up.

Some of the hospitals here forbid smoking on their property even in the parking lots and such among the exhaust fumes from vehicles.

I put in my living will that I would not be transported to any hospital that prohibited smoking on their entire property.

My college campus is a dry campus. You can smoke so long as you do so according to state law (20 feet away from any window, door, exhaust, etc.).
 
My college campus is a dry campus. You can smoke so long as you do so according to state law (20 feet away from any window, door, exhaust, etc.).

We have no smoking anywhere on the grounds. It seems that so long as smokers are discreet (i.e. they go the loading dock at the back of the building) the powers that be seem to turn a blind eye and it isn't enforced. I'd like to see them enforce it at least with the patients who light up and plop themselves down right in front of the entry doors, though.
 
We have no smoking anywhere on the grounds. It seems that so long as smokers are discreet (i.e. they go the loading dock at the back of the building) the powers that be seem to turn a blind eye and it isn't enforced. I'd like to see them enforce it at least with the patients who light up and plop themselves down right in front of the entry doors, though.

Yeah, before the smoking law was passed, the college had designated smoking areas, such as a gazebo located off to the side a short way from the main academic building. Same deal at nearby Evergreen State College, although I think they are stricter about enforcing the "designated zones" policy than we are...
 
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