Your Odds of Going Back to the Office Are Dropping by the Day

Apple, Google, Lyft, the New York Times, Twitter. The list of companies delaying office reopenings is growing.

Empty desks and chairs at Google headquarters in Mountain View, California, on Thursday. Yichuan Cao/AP

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Some good news if you’re an office worker who can’t stand your boss, commuting, or both: Your odds of returning to the office in the coming weeks are falling. 

Labor Day was supposed to be the big switch back to in-person work after 17 months of Zoom. Now, with the Delta variant surging across the country, many of America’s biggest corporations are pushing back their returns dates again—in some cases indefinitely. 

The New York Times announced on Friday that it was indefinitely delaying its September 7 return date. The move comes after a long list of delays at tech companies:

  • Last week, Apple delayed its return to in person work until October.
  • Twitter announced on Wednesday that it was immediately closing its New York and San Francisco offices and indefinitely postponing other office reopenings.
  • Also on Wednesday, Google said it would push back reopening until mid-October and require workers to be vaccinated.
  • The same day, Lyft suspended its return until February.
  • On Thursday, LinkedIn announced that it will allow employees to work remotely on a permanent basis. 

The closures mark a new, unfortunate, phase in the slow reopening of society. But the reality is that for many people, particularly people of color, working remotely has never been an option. In June, the progressive Economic Policy Institute found that only one in six Latinx workers and one in five Black workers have been able to telework during the pandemic, compared to one in four white workers. 

The disparities are even more severe along educational lines. In April, a third of workers with a bachelor’s degree or higher were teleworking. Only one in twenty workers with a high school degree or less were able to do the same. 

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Managing an independent, nonprofit newsroom is staggeringly hard. There’s no cushion in our budget—no backup revenue, no corporate safety net. We can’t afford to fall short, and we can’t rely on corporations or deep-pocketed interests to fund the fierce, investigative journalism Mother Jones exists to do.

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