Imagine having a government job, one of the cushiest and expected to do the most minimal work possible jobs out there.
And then quitting it because they dared ask that you come back into the office since the pandemic has long since ended. Especially, as the article points out, plenty of workers get to keep working from home partially anyway and got what they desired out of it. Meaning that these people are quitting because they had to settled for 1-2 days a week from home instead of the full 5 they wanted.
There is no way to spin this in which they come out looking good, which is probably why the article doesn't even bother to try and instead tries to focus on the governor being evil so therefore any decree he makes is too.
I'd probably quit my current job if they asked me to go back into the office full time, tbh. There is zero reason to endure the shitty drivers and shithole I have to drive through.
Perhaps you are more valuable than a government employee. This is all about negotiation and perception of self-worth. These high quality state employees are certainly free to quit if they they think somebody will hire them to work from home full time. Good luck in the market.
My value has nothing to do with it really. It's a waste of money to do jobs in an office that can be done from home. It's inefficient, and it's worse for many workers. I don't why so many people on the right have hamstered their way into being anti-work from home. It's giving more power to the cities, which trend blue.
Government employees, who aren't needed in the field, should be in the office. They have those buildings for a reason. Private sector should be between you and your employer.
You have this basically totally backwards. Many government jobs are either going to be IT or administrative, things that can easily be done from home. It's coming in that should be the exceptional case. The government (and this applies to private sector as well) can then drastically cut down on the real estate that it needs to maintain by using hotel spaces which would save an enormous amount of money.
if he had any balls he would outright fire anyone with "diversity" or "inclusion" or "outreach" in her job title
Imagine having a government job, one of the cushiest and expected to do the most minimal work possible jobs out there.
And then quitting it because they dared ask that you come back into the office since the pandemic has long since ended. Especially, as the article points out, plenty of workers get to keep working from home partially anyway and got what they desired out of it. Meaning that these people are quitting because they had to settled for 1-2 days a week from home instead of the full 5 they wanted.
There is no way to spin this in which they come out looking good, which is probably why the article doesn't even bother to try and instead tries to focus on the governor being evil so therefore any decree he makes is too.
You can not convince a slave that independent work is to their favor not detriment.
Good. Trash taking itself out. If only every state were so lucky/
I'd probably quit my current job if they asked me to go back into the office full time, tbh. There is zero reason to endure the shitty drivers and shithole I have to drive through.
Perhaps you are more valuable than a government employee. This is all about negotiation and perception of self-worth. These high quality state employees are certainly free to quit if they they think somebody will hire them to work from home full time. Good luck in the market.
My value has nothing to do with it really. It's a waste of money to do jobs in an office that can be done from home. It's inefficient, and it's worse for many workers. I don't why so many people on the right have hamstered their way into being anti-work from home. It's giving more power to the cities, which trend blue.
Government employees, who aren't needed in the field, should be in the office. They have those buildings for a reason. Private sector should be between you and your employer.
You have this basically totally backwards. Many government jobs are either going to be IT or administrative, things that can easily be done from home. It's coming in that should be the exceptional case. The government (and this applies to private sector as well) can then drastically cut down on the real estate that it needs to maintain by using hotel spaces which would save an enormous amount of money.