It's weird how many people I know who have not stopped going to work in thier downtown office jobs this entire time.
It's weird how many people I know who have not stopped going to work in thier downtown office jobs this entire time.
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It’s been fantastic. Will be sad when downtown gets busy again.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Actually I prefer the office when its only 10% occupied. But I have only been back may be 10 or so days since March. The drive is awesome. 0 distractions at work.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Last edited by Xtrema; 06-14-2020 at 10:24 PM.
I just go with the flow, couldn’t care one way or another. WFH has its benefits and drawbacks, same as the office.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Originally posted by Thales of Miletus
If you think I have been trying to present myself as intellectually superior, then you truly are a dimwit.
Originally posted by Toma
fact.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Which companies?" Someone asked?
I'm told that Baker Hughes is telling their people "count on this WFH for about the next 18 months".
Far more retarded companies run by Australian morons (Worley - I'm looking your way) have been told "keep working from home" without fuck all for guidelines on why/when/how things are supposed to be happening.
That's a shit pile of people with virtually zero guidance or timelines on anything when you consider that's Jacobs + WorleyParsons.
That's what you get when the foundation of your HaichEssEee policy is "Well... I'd feel better if..." as opposed to "I understand risk and will carefully work to mitigate it within accepted boundaries".
Bigger companies are ran by lawyers, worse for internationals. If WFH = less legal liability with acceptable lost in productivity, they probably will go that route.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Last edited by Xtrema; 06-14-2020 at 11:09 PM.
I hope these "stage 1" returns are mostly voluntary for people. Because it really does sound like with restrictions, it is just WFH but commuting to your office. So how is that productive for the company? Keeping it voluntary until stage 2/3 makes way more sense, so I feel for those who are forced back into work to be LESS productive.
I like WFH. Less butt explosions to clean up.
I think your mom has a message about usage of her toilets.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
RBC Insurance said December at the earliest?!
My company, it'll be mandatory back downtown in a week from how I'm reading the progression of the email updates.
Only a matter of time for Covid to run through an entire company to see the loss of production from an early and fast ramp up to 100% capacity.
Thats what our company is doing. Stage 1 is happening June 22nd, completely voluntary, 1-2 days a week max, only for people that want to go in due to having hard WFH setup (i.e. kids). Stage 2 is more people back but still limited (Can't remember if still voluntary but people can go back for the whole week now), Stage 3 is everyone back at the office with exemptions for people that need it (immune-compromised or high risk).This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I am using a mini display port to HDMI adaptor to run an external monitor from my Surface Pro 3. If I want to run two external monitors the only adaptors that have mini display to two HDMI connectors seem crazy expensive. Any thoughts? Work from home would be a bit easier if I can run both external monitors.
The surface has a dock that allows for multiple display output capacity
Sig nuked by mod.
Ironically I've had to clean up way more butt explosions working from home.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
My wife's work is planning for the week after labour day, to coincide with school starting. Assuming we don't get the 2nd wave before then.
Apparently that's when our Stage 3 will be. Unless infection number blows up again.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
But US border isn't open til July 21st and US numbers are blowing up and TFW infection is blowing up in Ontario. So it's pretty much anyone's guess at this point.
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Last edited by NoSup4U; 06-16-2020 at 08:13 PM.
City contractor here. Part of our group is back in the office, the remainder coming back next week. Its a weird feeling for sure. I liked WFH.
What are your guys' thoughts on companies forcing you to use vacation because they don't want to pay it out? I thought that was illegal, but maybe it depends on your employment contract.
My company and probably a lot of others are trying to get people to use their vacation as most people are sitting on 4-5 weeks of unused vacation due to the virus, cancelled trips, etc. The last thing anyone wants to do is take vacation to continue sitting at home as they have been for the last 3 months. Is there any way around that? I'm hoping things open up enough by the fall that I won't have any problem using up all my vacation but who knows how all this will play out.
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Nope thats in the employment standards. If you and your employer can't agree on holidays then they can designate time for you to take off. It needs to be sufficient notice ahead and such. Most places don't do it, cuz its a dick move ... but it is technically allowed.
https://www.alberta.ca/vacation-pay.aspx#toc-2
Disagreements about vacation dates
Employers are allowed to deny requests for vacation at specific times due to operational reasons. If the employer and employee can’t agree on the employee’s vacation time, the employer can decide when it will be taken. However, the employer must give the employee at least 2 weeks’ notice in writing of the vacation start date.