Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The Story of Guardian’s No-Smoking Policy Jim Wiard, Senior Vice President.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The Story of Guardian’s No-Smoking Policy Jim Wiard, Senior Vice President."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Story of Guardian’s No-Smoking Policy Jim Wiard, Senior Vice President

2 Who is Guardian Management LLC?   Manages 130 properties in six states   Portfolio includes: Market rate housing – 7,500 units Affordable housing – 4,500 units

3 What Led Us to Decision?   2006 renter survey showed that: 76% of tenants would rather live in a smoke-free building 52% would even pay higher rent Only 21% of tenants smoke Only 11% of tenants smoke inside Most tenants don’t smoke and over half already take their habit outside!

4 We Found Out No-Smoking Policies Were Legal Fair Housing Council of Oregon said: “ Smoking is not a protected class; Neither smokers nor the act of smoking are included as a protected class under federal, state, or local Fair Housing laws. ”

5 Other Benefits  Careless smoking is the #1 cause of apt. fires  Secondhand smoke is a dangerous health hazard  Turnover costs are high for smoked-in units  There is a market for healthy living homes

6 Step 1: Developed our policy   Smoking will be prohibited inside apartments and common areas such as: entryways parking areas patios and balconies within 25 feet of any building on the properties   Residents will be responsible for enforcing the policy within their units among inhabitants, guests and visitors

7 Step 2: Made a Transition Plan   Notified residents of pending change, implemented policy for all new residents   Chose an effective date for all month-to-month leases to change over: 1/1/08 – Most tenants signed new leases.   As one-year leases turned over, those tenants signed new agreements: process was completed in less than 12 months

8 Step 3: Gave notice to residents   Contacted Rural Development, HUD   Contacted owners   Spoke to staff members   Letter sent to residents 120 days before See toolkit for copies of these documents

9 Step 4: Marketed policy   Featured “No-Smoking” in ads as amenity   Interacted with the Media: Some disgruntled residents went to media looking for negative coverage We put out proactive media release extolling benefits to tenants and community This resulted in very positive coverage   Trained staff to be spokespersons

10 Step 5: Enforced Policy  We enforced the rule like any other rule: Include it in the rental agreementInclude it in the rental agreement Tell tenants about it during application and at move- inTell tenants about it during application and at move- in Post signs & stickersPost signs & stickers Hold tenants financially responsible for bringing the unit back to clean condition if damaged by smokeHold tenants financially responsible for bringing the unit back to clean condition if damaged by smoke Inspect the property regularlyInspect the property regularly Document & respond promptly to complaints about violationsDocument & respond promptly to complaints about violations Use a system of warning lettersUse a system of warning letters

11 Resident Satisfaction   One year after implementation, an independent resident survey found: Nearly 3/4 of all residents were happy with the no smoking policyno smoking policy Even among smokers, 30% felt the same way

12 Reduction in Secondhand Smoke Exposure   The resident survey also found: The % of non-smokers who reported never being exposed to SHS in their apartments increased by 75% The % of non-smokers who reported never being exposed to SHS outdoors on porches, patios or balconies more than doubled

13 Smokers Cut Back after Policy   In the year following implementation, Among smokers, 43% reported smoking less Nearly half of respondents who smoked reported making a quit attempt - 2/3 of those cited the Guardian policy as part of, or the main reason, for the quit attempt

14 Guardian’s Satisfaction with Policy   Cut down on cleaning/painting costs   Reduced tenant complaints about smoke   Happy employees   Enhanced our Green Initiative   Fewer fires?   Occupancy rates?

15 Implementing No-Smoking Policies: Removing the Barriers

16 Do you have a pile like this at your house?

17 To grocery store To mailbox store To Goodwill To Free Geek To Multi-Cultural Center

18 Questions to ask yourselves   What would it take for us to adopt no-smoking rules for our properties?   What are the steps we’ll have to take?

19 Challenges/Solutions?   What might be barriers or challenges?   How could we prevent/resolve them?

20 Staff/resident input?   Have we gotten feedback from staff about: Cleaning problems created by smokers? Complaints from people living next to smokers?   Should we conduct a tenant survey to determine residents’ preferences?

21 What could public health partners help with?   Conducting resident surveys   Attending resident meetings to discuss policy   Helping prepare Board Presentation   Training of onsite property managers   Signage

22 What is our policy going to cover?   Inside units?   Outside spaces such as patios & balconies?   Common outside areas?   Within a certain distance from buildings?

23 What are we waiting for?   What would be a reasonable timeline?   When do we get started?

24 Diane Laughter MPH, Health In Sight LLC Oregon Smokefree Housing Project www.smokefreehousinginfo.com


Download ppt "The Story of Guardian’s No-Smoking Policy Jim Wiard, Senior Vice President."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google