October 30, 2023
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Effects of Remote Work Coming into Focus

The Covid-19 pandemic set off a seismic shift in workers’ lives throughout the world. For some, such as delivery drivers and grocery store workers, this meant accepting increased risks on the job in exchange for employment. For others, however, especially white collar office workers, the actual office was jettisoned in favor of the virtual one. Three years on and remote work has changed employment and work patterns for these people in ways that we are only just starting to get a grasp on.

With the wide scale adoption of social media and the ubiquity of digital communications, the lines between home and work had already been blurring when lockdowns were instituted in the spring of 2020. But the wholesale adoption of remote work for office workers meant that overnight 54 percent of workers went fully remote. Researchers and policy makers knew there would be effects, not only on office workers and corporations, but many adjacent industries, such as hospitality and commercial real estate, and now the early research is streaming in, indicating, as Emma Goldberg writes in the New York Times, “many workers and businesses have made real gains under remote work arrangements, and many have also had to bear costs.”

Many workers were able to take advantage of remote work by moving to more affordable locations, creating an increased demand for services in the places in which they moved. However, this had a negative effect on businesses and services, like lunch spots or public transportation, in formerly busy locations that relied on office workers. 

For women, Goldberg notes, it has also been an uneven shift. On the one hand, women have been able to remain in the workforce, albeit while often having to shoulder more familiar responsibilities as childcare options dwindled, but they also faced a more difficult path to career advancement.

While some of these are fairly easy to measure, others, such as the effect on worker productivity have been harder to pin down. Much of this is due to the difficulty in measuring productivity in services, such as law, finance, and education. But even taking that into account, economists have come to no consensus on whether remote work has increased or decreased productivity. 

As offices adapt to this new working environment, either by recalling workers to the office, adopting hybrid work arrangements or remaining 100% remote, there will be more data to measure in the coming years, but one thing that does not seem to be under dispute is that remote work, in some form, is here to stay.

If you have any questions about how remote work affects you or your business, contact Berke Weiss Law PLLC.

The Week in FFCRA Cases Includes a Class Action Suit against the USDA

July 24, 2020
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Four cases came across the wire this week and we have chosen to highlight them all. One case is the first class action lawsuit filed under the FFCRA and concerns potentially millions of people seeking SNAP aid. The three other suits that were filed this week follow a familiar line for anyone who has been reading our updates. People are getting sick or have family members getting sick and are then denied their right to paid leave and are terminated.

Dueling Congressional Plans to Bailout US Childcare

July 21, 2020
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By now, the fact that childcare is in crisis is not new. But as the weeks creep by it is crystallizing as one of the signal problems of the pandemic lockdowns. Without childcare, which includes open K-12 schools, parents, child care workers, day care providers, and a host of others have been deeply affected. As Congress prepares to reconvene and wrangle over a new set of stimulus payments, a boost to the childcare industry is front and center.

The Berke-Weiss Law Weekly Roundup: School Reopenings and Employer Liability among Hot-button Issues

July 17, 2020
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This week includes updates on the latest roadblocks at another round of stimulus, which remains necessary as more than 30 million Americans remain out of work, officially, and countless more are shut out of the social welfare programs offered in the US. We also highlight school re-openings and general Covid risk analysis.

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