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Here we go again. An increase in COVID-19 cases due to a new highly has thrown a wrench into most employers’ .
Only one week into 2022, central business districts remain barren, despite many employers’ previously announced expectations that workers come back to the office to start the new year.More than seven out of 10 professionals in the U.S. (71%) said their company had postponed its return-to-office plans because of the omicron variant of COVID-19, according to a new survey of 3,167 verified professionals in the U.S. from the Blind.The remaining 29% reported no such changes at their workplaces.
Survey responses from verified professionals at Apple, Cisco, Credit Karma, Cruise, DocuSign, eBay, Expedia, Google, Intel, Lyft, MathWorks, Microsoft, Oracle, Peloton, Pinterest, Roblox, SAP, Twilio and Uber confirmed the delayed office reopenings, some of them indefinitely.
A few companies have pushed back their plans by as little as one month, even amid the uncertainty caused by the omicron variant.“Already pushed back a month,” said a verified Credit Karma professional, referring to the personal finance company’s new mid-February return date in a discussion of return-to-office plans.In contrast, many financial services companies, generally loathe in allowing work from home, have also held off on bringing employees back. American Express, Bloomberg, Charles Schwab, Goldman Sachs, Vanguard, Visa and Wells Fargo have altered their return to the office.“RTO was originally scheduled for now, but they finally caved at the last minute and pushed it back because of omicron,” said a verified Charles Schwab professional. “So stupid that they are forcing us back at all.”
A majority of verified professionals at Apple, Bloomberg, Broadcom, Cruise, Goldman Sachs, Micron Technology, Roblox, Salesforce and Wayfair confirmed their companies require COVID-19 testing to work in the office in Blind’s survey.While many companies have taken steps to verify their employees are vaccinated against COVID-19, Blind found few companies have yet to require a “booster” shot.About one in four U.S. professionals (24%) said their company had announced a requirement to get a booster COVID-19 vaccine, according to the survey from Blind, compared to the 76% who said no such policy exists. Bloomberg, Broadcom, Credit Karma and Goldman Sachs are some of the employers with a COVID-19 booster requirement for employees.