Vanilla is a product of Lussumo:
Documentation and Support.
So, a fair compromise might be to allow proprieters to choose whether or not they make their venues smoke - free, while at the same time making the 'pro smoking' proprieters pay a proportion of his or her staff's national insurance contributions as compensation for the increased risk the staff are exposed to. That way, employers don't get to compromise their employees' health in the persuit of profit, and non smoking venues will be able to compete on a level playing field with smoking venues.
Works fine as long as restaurants and pubs have equal provision for both smokers and non smokers. However, if the prevailing economic situation means it's more profitable for establishments to cater entirely to smokers, then more venues will do just that. More jobs in the industry for those who smoke, fewer for those who don't. I'm not saying that proprietors shouldn't have the right to allow smoking, just that it's not fair to allow a situation that makes workers choose between a job and better health.
but would you not agree that your staff should have some form of protection from secondary smoke?
Okay, here's the thing: I don't want to get eaten, so I've decided not to apply for a job as a dog walker.....
chance for me to remind you of the serious threats that are being ignored.
But smoking in bus shelters? On train platforms? The only harm being caused here is to people's increasingly delicate sensibilities. Sure, you may find the smell of a cigarette unpleasant, but guess what? There are a whole lot of things people may find unpleasant about you.
Businesses that don't want to go to the trouble can just be non-smoking. Businesses that do will have happy little smokers in their own special room, and happy little non-smokers in the rest of the place.
I'm pretty sure one of the Canadian provinces allows for pubs and restaurants to choose a smoking or non-smoking license (the smoking license being more expensive).
It's a restriction on personal freedoms, yes definitely, but it's also a restriction on the non-smokers personal freedoms when they can't go have a whiskey and a steak without a smoke second-hand