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The Underwear Law Prediction

 

Source:

Fla. city tells workers to wear underwear, use deodorant, in new dress code stressing hygiene

Bureau News
June 18th, 2009

Fla. city to workers: Wear underwear, deodorant

BROOKSVILLE, Fla. — A Florida city is cleaning up with a new dress code that requires city workers to wear underwear and use deodorant.

 

The city council in Brooksville north of Tampa recently approved a dress code that instructs employees to observe “strict personal hygiene.”

It also prohibits exposed underwear, clothing with foul language, “sexually provocative” clothes and piercings anywhere except the ears.

Repeat offenders can be fired.

The city council approved the dress code 4-1 as part of a wider effort to update existing policies and ordinances.

The one vote in opposition came from Mayor Joe Bernadini. He said the underwear edict “takes away freedom of choice.”

Information from: The Tampa Tribune, www.tampatrib.com

 

St Petersburg Times

Brooksville's new dress code requires deodorant, underwear

Source

By Joel Anderson, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Sunday, June 14, 2009


BROOKSVILLE — If you want to work for the city of Brooksville, be sure that you use deodorant, that your clothes fit properly and that you cover up your wounds and tattoos.

And, for goodness sake, wear underwear.

If not, you could violate the city's new dress code.

The Brooksville City Council approved a dress and appearance policy by a count of 4-1 this month, with only Mayor Joe Bernardini casting the dissenting vote. He questioned how the code would be interpreted and enforced.

"They said you had to wear undergarments," Bernardini said, "but who's going to be the judge of that? Sometimes when it comes to certain people going bra-less, it's obvious. But who's staring to see if that person doesn't have underwear on?"

Brooksville officials say the new dress code is merely part of an extensive overhaul of the city's personnel policy.

"The policy is there if something becomes an issue or problem," City Manager Jennene Norman-Vacha said. "Then we want to be able to address it. It's just good policy."

After consulting with a number of sources, city officials and attorneys have come up with guidelines on how employees should maintain their "public image" from head to toe and almost everywhere in between.

Among the listed requirements: employees will not be allowed to wear clothing considered "distracting, offensive or revealing"; body-piercings should be visible only in the ear; all cuts or wounds must be covered; and halter tops, Spandex, or skirts "worn below the waistline such that the abdomen or back is exposed" will not be permitted.

Also, employees who must wear uniforms to work should keep them "neat, cleaned and pressed," according to the policy.

City department heads and managers will interpret and enforce the dress code.

Employees found to be in violation of the policy can be sent home to change and not paid for the time missed from work. Multiple violations could result in disciplinary action up to and including termination.

"As far as I know, we haven't sent anyone home from work because of their clothing," Norman-Vacha said. "I don't believe anything is going to happen. We haven't been having any problems."

Locally, Brooksville joins Hernando County and the School Board in implementing an employee dress code.

Former council member Mary Staib tried unsuccessfully to pitch a dress code in November 1996 after sexual harassment allegations against then-City Manager Richard Anderson.

Staib's proposed policy banned items including jeans, anything made of denim, spaghetti-strap sun dresses without jackets, excessively wrinkled clothing, flip-flop sandals, T-shirts, leggings, low-cut or revealing tops, and midriff tops.

Also, hemlines would have been required to hit the top of the knee and skirt splits would have been limited to an inch "to allow you to negotiate a step," Staib said.

Staib implied that Anderson's secretary, who later reached a $135,000 settlement after suing the city manager and Brooksville, may have dressed in a way that enticed Anderson.

"Men have it hard enough just to do a day's work and not be enticed by a woman who is not dressed properly," Staib said at the time. "If you have to bend over for the bottom file . . . that would entice any man, unless he is not completely a man."

Ultimately, Staib could not find anyone on the council to second her motion to adopt the policy. But times have changed for the only current member of the council who served with Staib.

Joe Johnston III, who was vice mayor when he rejected Staib's policy in 1996, has come around on the issue this time.

"From a management standpoint, you've got to have it on the books," Johnston said. "We're not doing it because there's people out there flaunting themselves around."

Jennifer Rey, an attorney with the Hogan Law Firm in Brooksville, doesn't expect any problems.

Rey said her firm and city officials looked at a number of existing dress codes when putting the policy together.

"It was derived from a number of sources," Rey said. "The general intent is to allow the city, as an employer, to manager its people and to establish a professional, public image."

Which, of course, includes wearing deodorant and undergarments.

Joel Anderson can be reached at joelanderson@sptimes.com or (352) 754-6120.



[Last modified: Jun 15, 2009 10:15 PM]

 

Source: Quote:
Brooksville City Council's underwear rule rankles Keith Olbermann

Published Monday, June 15, 2009

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BROOKSVILLE — Keith Olbermann's nightly "Worst Persons in the World" segment on his MSNBC show usually targets conservative commentators such as Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck and Bill O'Reilly. On Monday night's broadcast of Countdown, the seat of dishonor belonged to the Brooksville City Council.

Olbermann took the council to task for passing a dress code for city employees that he felt went too far into personal space. As detailed Sunday in a St. Petersburg Times story, the new policy dictates that employees use deodorant, keep their tattoos and wounds covered, do not wear spandex or revealing clothing, and only wear piercings in their ears. Oh, and they must wear underwear.

The last part got under Olbermann's skin. Quoting the Times story's references to Mayor Joe Bernardini's questions about who will monitor compliance with the skivvies' rule, Olbermann compared the council to the character Woody Allen played in his 1971 movie Bananas. In it, Fielding Mellish, president of the fictional country of San Marcos, decrees that everyone must change their underwear every half-hour and so they must wear their underwear outside of their clothing.


http://www.tampabay.com/news/bizarre/article1010455.ece

So basically, there's a new dress code for city employees, saying that they must wear clothes that fit, cover wounds and tattoos, wear deoderant and underwear. The mayor was the sole opposing vote, mentioning how hard this would be to inforce.

Source

City To Workers: Wear Underwear, Deodorant

Brooksville, Fla., Approves Dress Code

POSTED: Thursday, June 18, 2009
UPDATED: 2:52 pm EDT June 18, 2009
BROOKSVILLE, Fla. -- A Florida city is cleaning up with a new dress code that requires city workers to wear underwear and use deodorant. The city council in Brooksville north of Tampa recently approved a dress code that instructs employees to observe "strict personal hygiene." It also prohibits exposed underwear, clothing with foul language, "sexually provocative" clothes and piercings anywhere except the ears. Repeat offenders can be fired. The city council approved the dress code 4-1 as part of a wider effort to update existing policies and ordinances. The one vote in opposition came from Mayor Joe Bernadini. He said the underwear edict "takes away freedom of choice." ___ Information from: The Tampa Tribune, http://www.tampatrib.com

Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source

Fla. city tells workers to wear underwear, use deodorant, in new dress code stressing hygiene

I don’t know about everyone reading this but I thought this was pretty much common sense, I am glad the city council can stay busy though!

manBROOKSVILLE, Fla. (AP) — A Florida city is cleaning up with a new dress code that requires city workers to wear underwear and use deodorant.

The city council in Brooksville north of Tampa recently approved a dress code that instructs employees to observe “strict personal hygiene.”

It also prohibits exposed underwear, clothing with foul language, “sexually provocative” clothes and piercings anywhere except the ears.

Repeat offenders can be fired.

The city council approved the dress code 4-1 as part of a wider effort to update existing policies and ordinances.

The one vote in opposition came from Mayor Joe Bernadini. He said the underwear edict “takes away freedom of choice.”

Information from: The Tampa Tribune, http://www.tampatrib.com

Source:

Published: June 15, 2009 at 10:07 AM
BROOKSVILLE, Fla., June 15 (UPI) -- The City Council of Brooksville, Fla., has approved a citywide dress code requiring city employees to wear underwear, deodorant and properly-fitted clothes.

The dress and appearance policy, which also requires all tattoos and scars to be covered up during work hours, was approved 4-1, with only Mayor Joe Bernardini voting against the dress code due to concerns about interpretation and enforcement of the new rules, the St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times reported Monday.

"They said you had to wear undergarments," Bernardini said, "but who's going to be the judge of that? Sometimes when it comes to certain people going bra-less, it's obvious. But who's staring to see if that person doesn't have underwear on?"

However, officials said the dress code is part of an overhaul of the city's policy toward its employees that was developed with help from city officials, attorneys and other sources. The officials said they want public employees to maintain the city's "public image."

"The policy is there if something becomes an issue or problem," City Manager Jennene Norman-Vacha said. "Then we want to be able to address it. It's just good policy."

 

Source:

 

Fox Nation

Florida City Tells Works to Wear Underwear, Deodorant

A Florida city is cleaning up with a new dress code that requires city workers to wear underwear and use deodorant. The city council in Brooksville north of Tampa recently approved a dress code that instructs employees to observe "strict personal hygiene."

Jun 18, 2009 4:06 pm US/Eastern

Fla. City Tells Workers: Wear Underwear, Deodorant

Brooksville City Council Encourages 'Strict Personal Hygiene'

BROOKSVILLE, Fla. (AP) ―
Brooksville city council in Florida has instructed employees to wear deodorant, cover tattoos and to put on underwear before coming to work. (File)

AP

A Florida city is cleaning up with a new dress code that requires city workers to wear underwear and use deodorant. The city council in Brooksville north of Tampa recently approved a dress code that instructs employees to observe "strict personal hygiene."

Exposed Underweaar

It also prohibits exposed underwear, clothing with foul language, "sexually provocative" clothes and piercings anywhere except the ears.

Repeat offenders can be fired.

The city council approved the dress code 4-1 as part of a wider effort to update existing policies and ordinances.

The one vote in opposition came from Mayor Joe Bernadini, reports CBS affiliate WTSP-TV in Tampa. "I voted against it. I think it takes away people's personal freedom in my opinion it insults their intelligence a little bit," Bernadini told WTSP.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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