Construction for new smoking pavilion is underway

Just over a month after Vice President for Student Affairs and Dean of Student Zauyah Waite and Senior Vice President for Finance and Administration Walt Fowler sent a campus-wide email regarding Chatham’s new smoking policy and its plans to create a “smoking pavilion” by the ramp leading to the library, the pavilion’s overhang has been constructed.

Waite and Fowler’s initial email followed the removal of the benches on which smokers would sit to have a cigarette near the Braun, Falk, and Coolidge Building Complex.  According to their email, these benches were removed due to increased complaints from people with respiratory problems in Braun, Falk, and Coolidge.

They promised a smoking pavilion for the Shadyside campus, similar to one constructed on Chatham’s Eastside campus, which, “[seemed] to have alleviated 95 percent of the complaints of non-smokers,” at Eastside.

Although only the pavilion’s roof has been built to date, a picnic table will be installed soon.

According to Robert DuBray, Director of Facilities Management and Public Safety and the overseer of the pavilion project, the pavilion will be completed, “as quickly as we possibly can.”

The facilities crew, who is responsible for the site’s construction, plan to level the ground under the structure, stain the structure’s wood to protect it from weathering, and add a picnic table and several cigarette urns.

At the moment, Facilities is concerned with managing the fallen leaves on campus before any drastic changes in weather conditions.  However, DuBray hopes that the table and urns will be moved to the site by the end of Thanksgiving Break. They plan to level the ground and stain the structure when weather permits.

Although the pavilion is relatively close to an entrance to the library, DuBray believes this location will cause fewer complaints than the former smoking area by Braun, Falk, and Coolidge.

According to DuBray, the benches smokers used to use were too close to faculty offices.  Smoke would enter the buildings through open windows and cause discomfort to those inside.  There are no operable windows near the pavilion’s location by the library, and the pavilion is, “off the beaten path,” he said, so there are likely to be fewer complaints.

“We hope [students, faculty, and staff] will maintain [the pavilion] and use the urns provided,” said DuBray. “We hope it’ll work out for everyone.”

Chatham University revises its smoking policy

On Friday, October 17, all of Chatham’s faculty, staff, and students received an email from Zauyah Waite, Vice President for Student Affairs and Dean of Students, and Walt Fowler, Senior Vice President for Finance and Administration, regarding changes to the smoking policy on campus.

This email follows recent interest in the smoking policy, sparked by the removal of the smoking benches on the quad near the Braun, Falk, and Coolidge building complex earlier this month. The benches were replaced with a sign that read, “No Smoking, Violators $100 Fine.” This sign has since been removed from its post.

In the campus-wide email, Waite and Fowler address the disappearance of the benches. According to the email, complaints of cigarette smoke have increased this semester, especially from people with respiratory problems in the Braun, Falk, and Coolidge area.

The email states that public safety officers had asked smokers to move away from the former designated smoking area, and they had relocated the “cigarette butt caddies.” However, their requests were not being respected and the caddies were being moved back to the area, making the sign prohibiting smoking in the area necessary.

“It is Chatham’s desire to afford students, faculty, staff, and visitors on campus the right to breathe clean air while also maintaining the rights of our constituents to make their own health choices,” the email read.

To ensure the right to breath clean air, smoking is, “prohibited in areas where offices and classrooms can be impacted,” according to Waite and Fowler. Specifically, the email mentioned that smoking would not be allowed surrounding Braun, Falk, and Coolidge on either the side facing the quad or the side facing Buhl Hall.

According to the email, there is currently no sure way to enforce this ban. However, upon being caught smoking near a building or littering the ground with cigarette butts, students will be charged a $25 fine per offense. Public Safety will be responsible for fining offenders.

The email also expressed the administration’s concern with allowing those who choose to smoke to do so.

The smoking benches removed from the Braun, Falk, and Coolidge area were aged and in poor condition. It is the administration’s intention to “replank” them and reinstall them on the Quad, along with additional benches and a picnic table.

In addition, the administration plans to construct a “smoking pavilion” with picnic tables next to the ramp leading to the library.

Although no timeline was mentioned in the campus-wide email, Waite has since said that these changes are, “scheduled to be completed by the end of the semester.”

“It is our intent that [the pavilion] will be both convenient for students who want to smoke but will also be far enough away from [Braun, Falk, and Coolidge] and other buildings that the smoke will not impact other community members,” said Waite and Fowler in the email.

They then cite a similar pavilion that was created at Chatham’s Eastside campus in response to complaints of cigarette smoke too close to the building. According to the email, the pavilion, “seems to have alleviated 95% of the complaints of non-smokers.”

Despite Waite and Fowler’s interest in creating solutions that serve both smokers and non-smokers, they make it clear that, “non-smoker concerns must take priority.”

Having reviewed the smoking policies of other campuses, Waite and Fowler believe that most schools also prioritize non-smokers’ complaints of cigarette smoke, and they state that they, “think these new procedures are balanced.”

According to Waite, neither she nor Fowler has received any complaints from smokers about the new policy since their email was sent, and all of the feedback that they have received has been, “to express gratitude and thanks,” for the changes.

“I hope the current arrangements respect and meet the needs of the Chatham community members: students, faculty, and staff,” said Waite.