Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How many offices have room for the entire staff? Its not like this will happen next week. Leases will need to be signed. Cubes set up. Logistics of moving people and stuff.
People double up in cubes, work as a hive in a conference room and the cafeteria. We did that when a wing was under repair because of water damage.
Look at a Silicon Valley open office plan, they want to bring that here. No more cubes, 2x - 3x the density.
![]()
![]()
Anonymous wrote:So what happens if people keep teleworking anyway? They’re all fired? What a joke.
It takes my agency 6 months to implement a new version of adobe. It’ll take them at least 5 times that to implement thousands of people suddenly all coming back to the office at the same time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How many offices have room for the entire staff? Its not like this will happen next week. Leases will need to be signed. Cubes set up. Logistics of moving people and stuff.
People double up in cubes, work as a hive in a conference room and the cafeteria. We did that when a wing was under repair because of water damage.
Look at a Silicon Valley open office plan, they want to bring that here. No more cubes, 2x - 3x the density.
![]()
![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How many offices have room for the entire staff? Its not like this will happen next week. Leases will need to be signed. Cubes set up. Logistics of moving people and stuff.
People double up in cubes, work as a hive in a conference room and the cafeteria. We did that when a wing was under repair because of water damage.
Look at a Silicon Valley open office plan, they want to bring that here. No more cubes, 2x - 3x the density.
![]()
![]()
The funny thing is that the offices in those pictures aren’t even that dense. There’s a ton of open floor space in both of those pics. our government office has been reconfigured with mini-cubes and actually much more dense than either of those pictures.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How many offices have room for the entire staff? Its not like this will happen next week. Leases will need to be signed. Cubes set up. Logistics of moving people and stuff.
Ours does.
Ours does not. Many people were hired from other states and have remote status.
Ours doesn't either. There is another person sitting at my desk the 50 % of the time that I am not there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How many offices have room for the entire staff? Its not like this will happen next week. Leases will need to be signed. Cubes set up. Logistics of moving people and stuff.
Ours does.
Ours does not. Many people were hired from other states and have remote status.
Anonymous wrote:How many offices have room for the entire staff? Its not like this will happen next week. Leases will need to be signed. Cubes set up. Logistics of moving people and stuff.
Anonymous wrote:We are typically busy on Tuesdays, with a number of standing meetings with senior folks, and generally a lot of activity. It's eerily quiet today. Also, a lot of senior folks are just out of pocket, which isn't normal.
I'm wondering the same, especially for remote roles converted from telework.Anonymous wrote:The potential EO still doesn’t address how this will affect fully remote workers (not in DC). I guess we’ll find out more next week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How many offices have room for the entire staff? Its not like this will happen next week. Leases will need to be signed. Cubes set up. Logistics of moving people and stuff.
Ours does.
Anonymous wrote:How many offices have room for the entire staff? Its not like this will happen next week. Leases will need to be signed. Cubes set up. Logistics of moving people and stuff.