Carrying concealed or open while doing certain jobs poses a risk to yourself and to your coworkers, No matter how good your holster is there are jobs where your gun will take alot of abuse. Some of this abuse could cause it to malfunction. Such as jobs where temperture of the environment, and abuse the weapon would be subjected to amplify the chance of a malfunction. Basically the same reason I don't wear my wedding band at work It could amplify the chances of getting burned, or hooked on something and tearing a finger off. (I have seen both happen several times.)
Roper I understand your point on the parking lots,and am not contesting that, I am simply refering to Schlumper's mention of
As it is right now, hardly any companies allow ccw for liability reasons. I think it would be good to establish liability to the company if an employee is injured or killed at work if the company forbids ccw and ccw could have reasonably prevented it.
So my question is not about the parking lots, nor offices, storefronts, or any other place where the environment does not pose a risk. I can honestly tell you there are places I prefer to be wearing my gun, however there are places, (anywhere near a welder, boiler, cooling tower, manufacturing machinery, presses, lathes, PTO equipment, and several other environments) where I will NEVER go while wearing a gun. To me, establishing liability to the company is a dangerous game to play. I am going to repeat the questions of my former post. Who is deciding what situations could have been "reasonably prevented"? And what are they going to weigh into that decision? Are they going to take the reason why the person decided to pose a risk in the first place (why the guy lost his marbles) into account?
Plus I don't like the .gov telling me what choices to make (even if I agree with the choice) since giving them the power to say who's fault it is could later come back to bite me in the rear.
The company has no control over the individual and what they do. I see shifting the liability to the company as a strong arm tactic that I would not want used on me so therefore cannot support the use of it against someone else. If we want these companies to change the policies the way to do it (at least in my mind) is to show them the facts and use logic and reason to get them to see our side of the issue. If they still don't see the light then, I guess they refuse to open their eyes and perhaps we should reconsider our employment, or our business relationship with the company. (such as handing them a "no guns no money" card or looking for a company that aligns itself closer to our beliefs.
I'm sorry I wasn't clearer on the part of the discussion that I was referring to. Hopefully this cleared it up.