Harpers Tate
Established Member
- Joined
- 10 May 2013
- Messages
- 1,861
I totally fail to understand why anyone at all cares about this. The air is full of far more noxious things than Glycerine/Propylene Glycol vapour.
Seriously? You don't believe vapers - rail staff or otherwise - blowing a cloud of carcinogenic smoke in people's faces counts as anti-social behaviour?I totally fail to understand why anyone at all cares about this. The air is full of far more noxious things than Glycerine/Propylene Glycol vapour.
Seriously? You don't believe vapers - rail staff or otherwise - blowing a cloud of carcinogenic smoke in people's faces counts as anti-social behaviour?
- three single-use vapes are disposed of incorrectly in the UK each second;
- three out of four users are unaware of how to dispose of the vapes correctly; and
- a similar proportion is unaware vapes contain lithium batteries.
As someone who has twice had cancer linked to smoking whilst having never personally smoked in my life (passive smoking was the reason given) then I fully understand why people care about smoking or even vaping.I totally fail to understand why anyone at all cares about this. The air is full of far more noxious things than Glycerine/Propylene Glycol vapour.
I don't think the 'disgust' is about vaping in general, it is about doing it in uniform, in view of customers arriving.I totally fail to understand why anyone at all cares about this. The air is full of far more noxious things than Glycerine/Propylene Glycol vapour.
A pity though that BA don’t sort out their customer service which appears to rely on those awful ‘chat boxes’ where you put in a query and an automatic response comes up with the wrong thing. I was on one last week and put in “I want to contact a real human NOW” & was then placed 18th in a queue and when I did get one - it was an Indian call centre. No wonder they have such a terrible ranking on Tripadvisor and in the recent Consumer Association report (Which). Anyway, that’s beside the point and I drift off topic."The uniform proudly signals the airline’s British heritage and values, through the quality and attention to detail and in the overall professional image to the collection. As a customer facing employee and wearer of the uniform, you represent and uphold the reputation of British Airways every day".
I would of thought that going for a smoke in your uniform was a sackable offence? It certainly is in the food production industry.
It is not a sackable offence.I know, i was referring to hospital staff where hygiene is essential.
I can’t be bothered reading it but does it start ‘HEAR YE, HEAR YE’.I also note that non natural hair colours are forbidden as are visible tattoos - presumably because this gives a downmarket impression.
British Airways is an international airline which flies to six continents; airlines have very conservative dress and deportment policies for this reason.I have just read the British Airways uniform policy and think that some of the train companies can learn a thing or two from it. They would certainly never allow vaping by staff in public. I also note that non natural hair colours are forbidden as are visible tattoos - presumably because this gives a downmarket impression.
Do we see airline crews hanging around the entrances to airports vaping?
Fiction. It's neither smoke, nor proven to be carcinogenic.carcinogenic smoke