Yes, but have you considered the long-term contract the company has signed with the land leasing agency and the payouts to the construction company that new building and the architecture firm that designed it? Because the company put a lot of work into all of that and you seem ungrateful. Now please ignore the smog warning, you’re an essential worker, and come into the office you definitely need to be in where you will definitely be more productive. Remember, there’s a pizza party on Friday for all employees. You can donate to the pizza party fund straight from your paycheck!
That’s why I’m glad the Biden administration is pushing to have business space converted into residential space.
Yes, but the Biden administration is also forcing federal workers back into the office sooooo…
Fuck’s sake. Why can’t something just be good. Why does it have to be ruined?
But the pizza party doesn’t start until 3pm so don’t think about trying to beat traffic.
True story:
I started working from home following a heart attack and open heart surgery at the end of 2018. 2019 was one complication after another, but I was finally cleared to return to the office in 2020 - just in time to go back home for covid.
This month is 5 years WFH. I drive 1 day a week for groceries, prescriptions, and comic books.
After doing it for 3 years, I had saved enough money to buy a house. Got that sweet 3.25% interest rate too!
So, yeah, bad for commercial real estate, for me it was pretty good for residential real estate. ;)
I’ve been fully wfh since 2015. I do miss the social interactions but I’m much more productive at home.
I don’t, but then I’m antisocial. ;)
And yeah, you do get more done when you aren’t pulled into meetings that could have been emails.
And even if you do get pulled into a meeting that should be an email, you can multitask on the Zoom call
The best is when you multitask during a meeting and put two hours down on the ol time sheet because if I have to even listen to you then I’m working on that thing as well.
I don’t. I really couldn’t stand the people who would stand next to my desk having a 6 hour conversation with me or others sitting next to me.
Same. I miss donuts in the break room.
WFH not only cuts emissions. It also helps the worker spend way less money that would otherwise be spent in food, gas and other. It also saves a lot of time commuting from home to work.
As long as there is a life - work balance, and there is no effect in mental health, WFH is a blessing in more than one ways
awesome stuff! lets plant some beautiful nature all over these unnecessary concrete jungles and house the unhoused! Solarpunk is the future!
Praise the sun
Not my personal emissions. Now they are released more freely.
Let’s be honest here, it’s managers who are forcing employees to commute into the office for no reason that are raising emissions.
The evidence is that, on average, people who spend time in the office are more productive. While I’m 100% on board for flexible work schedules that include time at home, it’s not “no reason” that they want people back in the office.
You are kidding, right?
Holy shit, 17 days here and you’ve done nothing but shill.
Empty ad hominem, but I guess it your position isn’t based in reality, I should expect your defense of it to be based in reality either.
In other news, water is wet.
does this mean i can eat still eat the cows
Yes but they have to be wild and you need to hunt them with a rock tied to a stick.
Unfortunately their farts are still way worse, so no.
We eat them to eradicate them.
Lungs filling… sinuses packed with meat…
Yeah but I miss out of my stupid co-worker complaining about women in power, and what about all the 0 conversations I will have with my grumpy co-workers on other teams when I am getting coffee.
Since October, I must do 3.5h of commute per day to manage/operate systems 300km away from the office.
That really sucks. I hope that changes for ya soon.
Is that all? I would think it would be more.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
People who work remotely all the time produce less than half the greenhouse gas emissions of office workers, according to a new study.
Employees in the US who worked from home all the time were predicted to reduce their emissions by 54%, compared with workers in an office, the study found.
Wider emissions reducing benefits of working from home include the easing of vehicle congestion during rush hour in commuting areas, which is likely to improve fuel economy.
According to the study, this could result in longer commuting distances for hybrid workers and a greater carbon footprint due to the increased use of private vehicles.
The authors said: “While remote work shows potential in reducing carbon footprint, careful consideration of commuting patterns, building energy consumption, vehicle ownership, and non-commute-related travel is essential to fully realise its environmental benefits.”
While the findings do not apply to workers in many sectors – a bus driver, for example, cannot work from home – it provides pointers on how office-based employers can reduce company emissions.
The original article contains 591 words, the summary contains 171 words. Saved 71%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
My work wants us to work at the office 4x as much next year.