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I tooka. job at a factory as their engineering manager. We have signs on all the doors saying no weapons on site. I guess one of the machine operators has a boyfriend in jail who is getting out and has threatened to come by work and perfom some good old fashioned domestic violence on her. The meeting was about how to secure the facility. It was the Plant Manager, VP of ops and myself. The Plant manager and I report to the VP . We all agreed that securing the plant wasn't really an option. Need the airflow more than anything else. It gets hot. We settled on the "don't ask, dont tell" office carry option .

Edit: I was carrying a 365 in my backpack the whole time . Hahahaha
 
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I tooka. job at a factory as their engineering manager. We have signs on all the doors saying no weapons on site. I guess one of the machine operators has a boyfriend in jail who is getting out and has threatened to come by work and perfom some good old fashioned domestic violence on her. The meeting was about how to secure the facility. It was the Plant Manager, VP of ops and myself. The Plant manager and I report to the VP . We all agreed that securing the plant wasn't really an option. Need the airflow more than anything else. It gets hot. We settled on the "don't ask, dont tell" office carry option .
Good policy. Carry deep. Nobody's business but your own.

My …ahem.. "gerber multi-tool" never leaves my belt even when I can't carry anything else.
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I carried for many years at my job, even though it was against their policy and a firing offense to even have a firearm in the vehicle on company property. Being on call 24/7, I had to come in at all hours to fix systems to keep the lights on. When things got worse in the downtown area of the major city I worked in, we had staff attacked right at the building in early morning, I tried to get the security VP to approve me handing my piece in the morning, they had a safe, to be retrieved when I left. The powers that be said no. So, what they didn't know, didn't hurt them. I wasn't the only one who did so. I made it for 47 years before I retired. My boss, a gunner, suspected but never said anything.
 
Well I hope so but how?
Tell them that's how you discreetly carry your catheter supplies. That's what one old boy told me when I asked him if anyone ever asked what he had in that Sneaky Pete holster on his belt, since a lot of folks like us know what a Sneaky Pete holster looks like and what it contains. :s0140:
 
I worked for a couple of hospitals and a couple of home health places. I was always armed. Now, I wore a white consultation coat when I worked those places. I always had what looking like a doctors flashlight. In reality, it was a Stinger pen gun.mmit was my one shot last chance.

We had one of our surgeons get mugged in the hospital parking lot at nigh one time. He started carrying, and so did quite a few other employees. The same doc was robbed in the parking lot again, and he drew his weapon and (I think fired). Anyway the cops showed up and when the hospital heads found out, they sent out a memo reminding everyone that guns aren't allowed in the hospital, and you could be fired.

The surgeon was admonished, but continued carrying because they needed him too much and they couldn't afford to fire him.

When I worked at a home care company, I carried even though it was against policy. And I was always armed when I went out to see a patient. Usually just my penguin in their house, but I always had a gun stashed in my vehicle as well. Usually a 45.

I've seen so much weird bubblegum working in home care. And a lot of times, you're driving a hundred miles away from the office. A lot of bad bubblegum can happen if you breaks down in the middle of nowhere.
 

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