By throwing them out.
First, if you are requested to remove combustibles from a designated smoking area, that task should be apart of your job description and mandates that you have received all the necessary training to carry out the task safely. If not, then you can refuse to do so on the basis you have not been trained to handle hazardous materials.
Depends on wind direction and flammable materials.
Anything that will burn! That would include paper, wood, fabric and volatile liquids.
It means remove anything that his highly flammable from the area. This makes sense since smoking means matches, lighters, and sparks. If anything combustible is in the area, there could be an explosion. So remove tanks of gasoline, pressurized gases, etc.
No.
"Remove all of the combustibles" means to take away anything that is capable of catching fire easily, such as paper, cloth, or flammable liquids, from a certain area to reduce the risk of fire or explosion.
To change a used ashtray in a designated smoking area, I would first ensure I’m wearing gloves for hygiene. Next, I would carefully remove the ashtray, disposing of the contents in a designated waste container, preferably one designed for hazardous materials if applicable. After cleaning the ashtray with a suitable disinfectant, I would replace it with a new or cleaned ashtray, ensuring it's securely positioned for easy access by smokers. Finally, I would check the area for litter and clean up any stray cigarette butts.
Smoking in the terminals is prohibited by Hong Kong law, except in the designated smoking lounges at the restricted area of Terminal 1.
Smokers have the right to have a designated smoking area where they can smoke without harming anybody else, since the smoke has been determined to be just as bad if you're not smoking but just happen to breathe it in when a smoker passes you.
Schipol airport, in designated areas near bars. Hurrah!Great.
I was born in 1979 and while my mother was having contractions, the doctor was smoking in the labor room. One of the nurses said "One of these days you're going to blow the place up, smoking around that oxygen.." so..in the state of Maryland in 1979 it was legal. In my lifetime, I have no memories of smokers in hospitals.Recently, area hospitals have banned smoking on hospital property. A smoker used to be able to smoke at designated areas.In airports, there were designated smoking rooms.My mother said that people used to be able to smoke on airplanes. In 1994, smoking was banned in our local shopping malls.
No, the Boston airport is smoke-free and does not have a smoking area.