Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got rid of some office space during pandemic, remote employees have changed office location, although most remote employees are remote locally. Basically, some employees change teleworking status (before Covid) to remote status, with SF 50 duty station changed too.
There is no funding to get more office space (flat funding, majority of funding goes to employees' salary; while salary/other costs increase annually, there is not even enough money to fill every vacancy).
Why do you consider RTO to be unsafe.
It is very for our family as I have serious health isssues and my getting sick usually lands me in the hospital.
You should seek a reasonable accommodation or pursue disability.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got rid of some office space during pandemic, remote employees have changed office location, although most remote employees are remote locally. Basically, some employees change teleworking status (before Covid) to remote status, with SF 50 duty station changed too.
There is no funding to get more office space (flat funding, majority of funding goes to employees' salary; while salary/other costs increase annually, there is not even enough money to fill every vacancy).
Why people are so concerned about RTO?
Because it takes planning to rearrange your family life around a new commute.
So the smart thing to do is start planning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of work do people do where you can concentrate with many, many people around you speaking all of the time? A call center? This can't be anything that involves any sort of mental concentration.
I'm an in house attorney, but the policy applies to everyone including the CEO, CFO, GC, senior exec team, VPs, etc. Everyone. It's a multi-national company with >100k employees.
There are "team rooms" you can use for meetings and private conversations, but you can't camp in those either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got rid of some office space during pandemic, remote employees have changed office location, although most remote employees are remote locally. Basically, some employees change teleworking status (before Covid) to remote status, with SF 50 duty station changed too.
There is no funding to get more office space (flat funding, majority of funding goes to employees' salary; while salary/other costs increase annually, there is not even enough money to fill every vacancy).
Why people are so concerned about RTO?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got rid of some office space during pandemic, remote employees have changed office location, although most remote employees are remote locally. Basically, some employees change teleworking status (before Covid) to remote status, with SF 50 duty station changed too.
There is no funding to get more office space (flat funding, majority of funding goes to employees' salary; while salary/other costs increase annually, there is not even enough money to fill every vacancy).
Why people are so concerned about RTO?
Anonymous wrote:My (private sector) office moved to an open floor plan with hot desks before the pandemic. For everyone, including leadership. To answer some questions:
We are provided with headsets to take calls/Teams meetings. Our phone system is now integrated into Teams so all calls come through our computers or cell phones.
We also have meeting rooms of various sizes that people can reserve for private conversations or calls. There are three small “phone booths” that you can’t reserve, but I can duck into to make a personal call (make appointments, get test results, etc).
We were remote for two years during COVID. When we came back in Jan 2022, we had to rearrange our lives to accommodate commutes, childcare, and meal prep. I empathize: it’s a rat race. There was a fair amount of turnover initially. We replaced some positions, and reorganized others (which meant promotions for those who didn’t leave). And the show went on. In some respects, it was good to get new perspectives.
Many of the people who took new remote positions eventually got called back. I think the days of wide-spread remote work are over. I also don’t think it matters if it’s not for a good reason. The people who pay us want to see our butts in the office. That’s a good enough reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got rid of some office space during pandemic, remote employees have changed office location, although most remote employees are remote locally. Basically, some employees change teleworking status (before Covid) to remote status, with SF 50 duty station changed too.
There is no funding to get more office space (flat funding, majority of funding goes to employees' salary; while salary/other costs increase annually, there is not even enough money to fill every vacancy).
Why people are so concerned about RTO?
Because it takes planning to rearrange your family life around a new commute.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got rid of some office space during pandemic, remote employees have changed office location, although most remote employees are remote locally. Basically, some employees change teleworking status (before Covid) to remote status, with SF 50 duty station changed too.
There is no funding to get more office space (flat funding, majority of funding goes to employees' salary; while salary/other costs increase annually, there is not even enough money to fill every vacancy).
Why people are so concerned about RTO?
Anonymous wrote:What kind of work do people do where you can concentrate with many, many people around you speaking all of the time? A call center? This can't be anything that involves any sort of mental concentration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got rid of some office space during pandemic, remote employees have changed office location, although most remote employees are remote locally. Basically, some employees change teleworking status (before Covid) to remote status, with SF 50 duty station changed too.
There is no funding to get more office space (flat funding, majority of funding goes to employees' salary; while salary/other costs increase annually, there is not even enough money to fill every vacancy).
Why people are so concerned about RTO?
The pandemic broke a lot of our societies systems.
Childcare is understaffed and schools have few resources for after school care. No one wants to work these jobs since they are still underpaid and other jobs pay even more now because of increased minimum wage.
Traffic is far far worse for many reasons One is that no one takes public transit because of a perception of increased crime and potential for infection and hygiene awareness, people are driving and not carpooling anymore for similar reasons, many people are distracted on their phone and thus distracting driving makes for slower driving and more accidents. Also, there are far more gig drivers and delivery drivers on the road, which is increased traffic volume by an order of magnitude.
Finally, so much of work has gone online with virtual meetings and shared digital workspace that we go to an office to meet with someone on teams who is in another building. It is so pointless.
Really? My public school district has great extended care options and I go to work every day in person and don't think traffic is any worse than it ever was. Most days it's really not that bad. I go pick up my kids and everything. Just one person out here in reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got rid of some office space during pandemic, remote employees have changed office location, although most remote employees are remote locally. Basically, some employees change teleworking status (before Covid) to remote status, with SF 50 duty station changed too.
There is no funding to get more office space (flat funding, majority of funding goes to employees' salary; while salary/other costs increase annually, there is not even enough money to fill every vacancy).
Why do you consider RTO to be unsafe.
It is very for our family as I have serious health isssues and my getting sick usually lands me in the hospital.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of work do people do where you can concentrate with many, many people around you speaking all of the time? A call center? This can't be anything that involves any sort of mental concentration.
Frankly, very low level worker bees are responding to this, no quality work can be done in such an environment.
Yes, I'm on Teams calls a minimum of 4+ hours a day with people all over. I don't understand how that will work when we are all doing that.
At my place of work, people have headphones on and speak when they need to speak at a normal but not shouting volume. Invest in good head phones that have a noise canceling feature and it really isn't that big of a deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got rid of some office space during pandemic, remote employees have changed office location, although most remote employees are remote locally. Basically, some employees change teleworking status (before Covid) to remote status, with SF 50 duty station changed too.
There is no funding to get more office space (flat funding, majority of funding goes to employees' salary; while salary/other costs increase annually, there is not even enough money to fill every vacancy).
Why people are so concerned about RTO?
The pandemic broke a lot of our societies systems.
Childcare is understaffed and schools have few resources for after school care. No one wants to work these jobs since they are still underpaid and other jobs pay even more now because of increased minimum wage.
Traffic is far far worse for many reasons One is that no one takes public transit because of a perception of increased crime and potential for infection and hygiene awareness, people are driving and not carpooling anymore for similar reasons, many people are distracted on their phone and thus distracting driving makes for slower driving and more accidents. Also, there are far more gig drivers and delivery drivers on the road, which is increased traffic volume by an order of magnitude.
Finally, so much of work has gone online with virtual meetings and shared digital workspace that we go to an office to meet with someone on teams who is in another building. It is so pointless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got rid of some office space during pandemic, remote employees have changed office location, although most remote employees are remote locally. Basically, some employees change teleworking status (before Covid) to remote status, with SF 50 duty station changed too.
There is no funding to get more office space (flat funding, majority of funding goes to employees' salary; while salary/other costs increase annually, there is not even enough money to fill every vacancy).
Why people are so concerned about RTO?
Lives have been re-arranged around telework (yes, even by/especially by people who are legitimately working the hours they say they are working all the time). Not having those commutes, having the flexibility to start a load of laundry or a crock pot during "lunch," being there for a 5 pm sports practice when before you wouldn't have, being able to be at home with a tween on a day off while still working, and so much more.
Now imagine undoing all that re-arranging.