Working Remote
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We just told we're going back to working in the office 5 days a week, as of 11/6.
Ah well, it was good while it lasted. They're spending stupid money on a new building, they probably want somebody to work in it, after all.
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We just told we're going back to working in the office 5 days a week, as of 11/6.
Ah well, it was good while it lasted. They're spending stupid money on a new building, they probably want somebody to work in it, after all.
@Doctor-Phibes said in Working Remote:
We just told we're going back to working in the office 5 days a week, as of 11/6.
You knew this was coming, didn't you?
How long will your commute be, again?
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The more I think about this the more I realize this is a big effin deal. Cruz is absolutely right but his argument is wrong. This has absolutely nothing to do with private companies and employees.
This is the Federal Government. The Federal Government’s business MUST be conducted on Federal property using Federal equipment and resources. There needs to be transparency and accountability from all Federal employees no matter the level. I don’t care if you are simply web designer for the IRS, you need to walk past me and my friends standing in front of the entrance flipping you and the building off. Plus, all of your work and materials are public property and need to be accessible.
There is waaaaayyyy too much opportunity for malfeasance with these people working from their own homes.
@LuFins-Dad said in Working Remote:
The more I think about this the more I realize this is a big effin deal. Cruz is absolutely right but his argument is wrong. This has absolutely nothing to do with private companies and employees.
This is the Federal Government. The Federal Government’s business MUST be conducted on Federal property using Federal equipment and resources. There needs to be transparency and accountability from all Federal employees no matter the level. I don’t care if you are simply web designer for the IRS, you need to walk past me and my friends standing in front of the entrance flipping you and the building off. Plus, all of your work and materials are public property and need to be accessible.
There is waaaaayyyy too much opportunity for malfeasance with these people working from their own homes.
No, this is not realistic. Federal employees are known to routinely work remotely in many capacities and in many instances (e.g., FBI field agents, ATF agents, Secret Service agents, CIA agents, military field operatives). Federal government also contract out federal work to contractors not working in federal buildings, some are oversees not even on US soil. The demand that all federal work be done only inside federal buildings is just silly.
And how soon you forget, a pandemic recently forced almost the entire working population that could to "work from home." The US government needs to be able to survive this sort of crisis, and the last pandemic may not be the last one. Working remotely is one way to up the chance of survival.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Working Remote:
We just told we're going back to working in the office 5 days a week, as of 11/6.
You knew this was coming, didn't you?
How long will your commute be, again?
@George-K said in Working Remote:
@Doctor-Phibes said in Working Remote:
We just told we're going back to working in the office 5 days a week, as of 11/6.
You knew this was coming, didn't you?
How long will your commute be, again?
I've been working 5 days a week since March.
My main office is normally 35 miles away, but they're knocking it down, and they're putting us in a temporary place which is 5 miles, and about 20 minutes, further away, which is a royal PITA.
There is another office 15 miles from where I live, about 25 minutes very relaxing drive along country roads, and it's lovely - right out in the middle of nowhere, close to the Rhode Island/Connecticut border - we own hundreds of acres of woodland out there, don't ask me why. I've been going there, but I don't think I'll be able to justify it once my team are all back.
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@LuFins-Dad said in Working Remote:
The more I think about this the more I realize this is a big effin deal. Cruz is absolutely right but his argument is wrong. This has absolutely nothing to do with private companies and employees.
This is the Federal Government. The Federal Government’s business MUST be conducted on Federal property using Federal equipment and resources. There needs to be transparency and accountability from all Federal employees no matter the level. I don’t care if you are simply web designer for the IRS, you need to walk past me and my friends standing in front of the entrance flipping you and the building off. Plus, all of your work and materials are public property and need to be accessible.
There is waaaaayyyy too much opportunity for malfeasance with these people working from their own homes.
No, this is not realistic. Federal employees are known to routinely work remotely in many capacities and in many instances (e.g., FBI field agents, ATF agents, Secret Service agents, CIA agents, military field operatives). Federal government also contract out federal work to contractors not working in federal buildings, some are oversees not even on US soil. The demand that all federal work be done only inside federal buildings is just silly.
And how soon you forget, a pandemic recently forced almost the entire working population that could to "work from home." The US government needs to be able to survive this sort of crisis, and the last pandemic may not be the last one. Working remotely is one way to up the chance of survival.
@Axtremus said in Working Remote:
@LuFins-Dad said in Working Remote:
The more I think about this the more I realize this is a big effin deal. Cruz is absolutely right but his argument is wrong. This has absolutely nothing to do with private companies and employees.
This is the Federal Government. The Federal Government’s business MUST be conducted on Federal property using Federal equipment and resources. There needs to be transparency and accountability from all Federal employees no matter the level. I don’t care if you are simply web designer for the IRS, you need to walk past me and my friends standing in front of the entrance flipping you and the building off. Plus, all of your work and materials are public property and need to be accessible.
There is waaaaayyyy too much opportunity for malfeasance with these people working from their own homes.
No, this is not realistic. Federal employees are known to routinely work remotely in many capacities and in many instances (e.g., FBI field agents, ATF agents, Secret Service agents, CIA agents, military field operatives). Federal government also contract out federal work to contractors not working in federal buildings, some are oversees not even on US soil. The demand that all federal work be done only inside federal buildings is just silly.
And how soon you forget, a pandemic recently forced almost the entire working population that could to "work from home." The US government needs to be able to survive this sort of crisis, and the last pandemic may not be the last one. Working remotely is one way to up the chance of survival.
The U.S. Government does not care.
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@George-K said in Working Remote:
@Doctor-Phibes said in Working Remote:
We just told we're going back to working in the office 5 days a week, as of 11/6.
You knew this was coming, didn't you?
How long will your commute be, again?
I've been working 5 days a week since March.
My main office is normally 35 miles away, but they're knocking it down, and they're putting us in a temporary place which is 5 miles, and about 20 minutes, further away, which is a royal PITA.
There is another office 15 miles from where I live, about 25 minutes very relaxing drive along country roads, and it's lovely - right out in the middle of nowhere, close to the Rhode Island/Connecticut border - we own hundreds of acres of woodland out there, don't ask me why. I've been going there, but I don't think I'll be able to justify it once my team are all back.
@Doctor-Phibes said in Working Remote:
There is another office 15 miles from where I live, about 25 minutes very relaxing drive along country roads, and it's lovely - right out in the middle of nowhere, close to the Rhode Island/Connecticut border - we own hundreds of acres of woodland out there, don't ask me why. I've been going there, but I don't think I'll be able to justify it once my team are all back.
I used to take routes that were 5-10 minutes longer but much more peaceful. Was way better for my mental health than being stuck on the beltway.
Is there anyone on your team talking about quitting now that remote work is over? I know someone who's been working remotely and their team is talking about quitting now that they are being required back in the office for... shocker... 3 days a week.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Working Remote:
There is another office 15 miles from where I live, about 25 minutes very relaxing drive along country roads, and it's lovely - right out in the middle of nowhere, close to the Rhode Island/Connecticut border - we own hundreds of acres of woodland out there, don't ask me why. I've been going there, but I don't think I'll be able to justify it once my team are all back.
I used to take routes that were 5-10 minutes longer but much more peaceful. Was way better for my mental health than being stuck on the beltway.
Is there anyone on your team talking about quitting now that remote work is over? I know someone who's been working remotely and their team is talking about quitting now that they are being required back in the office for... shocker... 3 days a week.
@89th said in Working Remote:
Is there anyone on your team talking about quitting now that remote work is over? I know someone who's been working remotely and their team is talking about quitting now that they are being required back in the office for... shocker... 3 days a week.
Depending on the reasoning behind the mandatory return to the office, that could be a very smart move.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Working Remote:
There is another office 15 miles from where I live, about 25 minutes very relaxing drive along country roads, and it's lovely - right out in the middle of nowhere, close to the Rhode Island/Connecticut border - we own hundreds of acres of woodland out there, don't ask me why. I've been going there, but I don't think I'll be able to justify it once my team are all back.
I used to take routes that were 5-10 minutes longer but much more peaceful. Was way better for my mental health than being stuck on the beltway.
Is there anyone on your team talking about quitting now that remote work is over? I know someone who's been working remotely and their team is talking about quitting now that they are being required back in the office for... shocker... 3 days a week.
@89th said in Working Remote:
@Doctor-Phibes said in Working Remote:
I used to take routes that were 5-10 minutes longer but much more peaceful. Was way better for my mental health than being stuck on the beltway.
I do that a lot, especially driving back and forth to Chicago. Taking US 52 to US 41 was about 15 minutes longer, but much better than 3 hours on the white knuckle I65 between Indy and Chicago. Four lane highway, virtually no traffic at all. Better scenery.
Driving to Madison and back I'd skip going through Chicago, instead going through Champaign-Urbana, Bloomington IL and Rockford. Again, very little traffic. A few minutes longer, but much more enjoyable.
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It's interesting that you guys have such options when driving. Not so much here. Get off track, you're on a road where one-way bridges are still standing, and the alternate takes hours longer. And, wrong time of year, dangerous. We're not that much in the boonies, but there hasn't been much built around Portland since when I was a kid, and of course no beltway.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Working Remote:
There is another office 15 miles from where I live, about 25 minutes very relaxing drive along country roads, and it's lovely - right out in the middle of nowhere, close to the Rhode Island/Connecticut border - we own hundreds of acres of woodland out there, don't ask me why. I've been going there, but I don't think I'll be able to justify it once my team are all back.
I used to take routes that were 5-10 minutes longer but much more peaceful. Was way better for my mental health than being stuck on the beltway.
Is there anyone on your team talking about quitting now that remote work is over? I know someone who's been working remotely and their team is talking about quitting now that they are being required back in the office for... shocker... 3 days a week.
@89th said in Working Remote:
@Doctor-Phibes said in Working Remote:
Is there anyone on your team talking about quitting now that remote work is over? I know someone who's been working remotely and their team is talking about quitting now that they are being required back in the office for... shocker... 3 days a week.
Not on my team, but they're all middle aged guys with a house and a pension. The corporate office has a lot of younger folk, so that's going to be interesting.
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"There are 3 key reasons why remote work is actually bringing you down, according to top management experts"
1. Culture clash
A recurring theme for Cappelli and Nehmeh was the erosion of organizational culture and community. The authors described how, in a hybrid world, newer employees in particular struggle to learn by observation or build relationships—key aspects of professional growth that depended on physical proximity.
But that’s just the tip of the iceberg, or the top of the waterfall. They described a cascading effect downward onto mid-level and senior-level employees, who become increasingly detached from their jobs as work gets defined down to something that happens on a screen, not in real life.
Nehmeh said new hires suffer in this hybrid environment, because they cannot really learn by example and they don’t get the guidance or support that facilitates professional growth. They both described the horror of the “ping” familiar to any remote worker.
Consider the entry-level worker who needs help, Nehmeh adds: “You have to schedule a call, you have to ping somebody, they may not respond back if they don’t know you … there’s so many issues there.”2. Everything is a transaction
A less obvious outcome of the cultural erosion, Cappelli added, is that remote work leads people to think about their job more narrowly. Work has been boiled down to key performance indicators, or KPIs, blurring the line between the letter of the law and spirit of the law, so to speak. He said this started during the pandemic, when supervisors were told to hold people accountable, and with everyone working remotely, the easiest solution was to emphasize KPIs.
Cappelli conjured a world of strict KPIs and constant pings, but the problem is the people you’re pinging have their own KPIs, too. “If you want help from somebody, you have to ping them, and you ping, and, you know, they get the message, but it goes to the bottom of their stack.”
He said they conducted 38 separate focus groups, 760 people in all, and many responded that they would get to their “pings” after they finished their own work.
Cappelli said this might seem small, but he thinks it’s a huge change that really affects performance management. The office involved social relationships, while the world of pings and KPIs is reducing everything to a transaction.3. The productivity-sapping meetings problem
None of this should diminish the breakthrough of remote work in 2020, they argue, but that was a solution to an emergency, and cracks in the system are now more visible after several years.
The authors argued that Zoom meetings, which seem more efficient, actually make workers less productive while adding to the length of their average workday, meaning that productivity per hour is actually down. Cappelli said he thinks there are too many of these meetings, they go on for too long, and too many people tune out, turning off their cameras when they are likely doing other things.
Cappelli urged managers to rethink meetings that take up too much of people’s time, full of awkwardness that seems normal now but would have seemed bizarre five years ago. He said that more recently, he has heard of people skipping meetings and sending their AI agent to take notes in their stead. “They’re not even pretending to listen!”
Cappelli said that as meetings get bigger and less gets done, some people are even turning to post-meeting meetings to make sure they’re still on track. “It’s a mess. Those things could be fixed, right? But they’re not being fixed.”https://fortune.com/2025/10/01/remote-work-bad-culture-gen-z-entry-level-productivity/