Commuting to and from the office five times a week?
"It's just not what I want for my life," said Claire, a consultant in her thirties living in Washington.
Like Claire, millions of employees across the United States have grown fond of telework since the Covid-19 lockdown and now companies are struggling to bring them back to the office.
Before Covid-19, Americans workers had grown used to less-than-friendly job conditions, such as short vacations and little or no maternity leave, but the experience of working from home left them wanting more.
"All of these practices that workers had become accustomed to in the US before have now then kind of disrupted by the pandemic," chief economist Nela Richardson with the ADP Research Institute told AFP.
American offices are still half-empty compared to February 2020, according to a weekly average calculated by Kastle, which manages the entry badges of 40,000 companies around the country.
- 'The world is changing' -
There are also wide disparities between different regions and cities: offices in California's Silicon Valley, for example, have only recovered a third of their pre-pandemic occupants, compared with around half in New York and Washington, and as much as two-thirds in the Texas cities of Austin and Houston.
Many Amazon employees disagreed so strongly with the in-person working requirements that they took to the streets in front of the company's Seattle headquarters last month to protest the move.
"The world is changing, and Amazon needs to embrace the new reality of remote and flexible work," the organizers of the demonstration said in a statement.
Elon Musk, the billionaire boss of Tesla and Twitter, went a step further than Jassy, banning telework in the name of productivity and morality.
"You're going to (tell) the people who make your food that gets delivered, that they can't work from home, the people that come fix your house, they can't work from home, but you can?" he said in a recent interview.
- Half-empty offices -
"If I worked for an employer that required five days a week, I just don't think that would be on the table for me," Claire, the Washington-based consultant, told AFP.
Claire, who requested anonymity to discuss her employment, goes to the office irregularly, usually once every two weeks, sometimes more often. And, given the upsides, she can't see herself going back full-time.
She has replaced the metro to work with a walk around the block, no longer wastes time dressing for the office, and sits outside with her laptop whenever the sun shines.
Claire said she sometimes misses conversations with colleagues, but she also realizes the small talk led her to be less productive.
- A challenge -
Despite the headlines made by chief executives like Elon Musk, not all managers are opposed to telework.
Questions about "quality and lifestyle efficiency" have emerged, said Gayle Smith, chief executive of the Washington-based anti-poverty NGO One, which has offices in cities around the world.
"Raising kids became a bit easier if you didn't have to commute every morning," she told AFP.
Since the onset of the pandemic, some of her employees have left the Washington area in order to be closer to their aging parents, or to follow a spouse who relocates for work.
Gayle has seen no decline in efficiency but regrets the loss of the positive dynamic that comes from face-to-face work.
The question now, she says, is how to replicate this dynamic while preserving the lifestyle improvements for her employees.
"If we can regain that, at least in part, it'll put us in a very good place," she said.
For potential employees, "it's a choice of whether or not you are willing to negotiate that or look for that in your job search," she added.
But what employees really want, according to Richardson, is the flexibility to choose when they work.
"It's not necessarily (that) I want to work from home, I want to be surrounded by dirty dishes and unmade beds," she said.
"It's the fact that I can choose what hours I work."
jul-da/md
© Agence France-Presse
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