Skip to content
0
  • Home
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • World
  • Users
  • Groups
  • Home
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • World
  • Users
  • Groups
Skins
  • Light
  • Brite
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (Sketchy)
  • No Skin
Collapse

Wandering Adventure Party

  1. Home
  2. Canada
  3. Premier Doug Ford's government is ordering Ontario public servants to work from the office four days a week starting this fall and then full-time in January

Premier Doug Ford's government is ordering Ontario public servants to work from the office four days a week starting this fall and then full-time in January

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Canada
canada
48 Posts 33 Posters 0 Views
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH hiddenlayer555@lemmy.ml

    Dude was getting lonely not being able to micromanage the lives of government employees.

    Text of the article at the time of posting:

    Ontario ordering public servants back into office full time

    Current mandate of 3 days a week has been provincial government policy since April 2022

    Mike Crawley · CBC News · Posted: Aug 14, 2025 7:17 AM PDT | Last Updated: 1 hour ago

    Premier Doug Ford’s government is ordering Ontario public servants to work from the office four days a week starting this fall and then full-time in January.

    It’s a change from a policy that has been in place since April 2022, when provincial government employees were mandated to be in their offices at least three days per week.

    Employees of the Ontario Public Service, provincial agencies, boards and commissions must “increase their attendance to four days per week” starting Oct. 20 and transition to full-time hours in-office effective Jan. 5, 2026, said Treasury Board President Caroline Mulroney in an announcement Thursday.

    Ford says he believes government employees are more productive when they are in the office.

    “How do you mentor someone over a phone? You can’t. You’ve got to look at them eye to eye,” Ford said during an unrelated news conference Thursday in Pickering.

    Ford also suggested having provincial workers return to the office is better for the economy, pointing out that many small businesses that rely on foot traffic from office workers have suffered due to remote work policies.

    “There’s hard-working entrepreneurs that their business has basically just died when they weren’t seeing the flow of traffic.”

    The news follows on the heels of announcements by four of Canada’s big banks — RBC, Scotiabank, BMO and TD — that staff at their Toronto headquarters must spend at least four days a week in the office, effective this fall.

    ‘Everyone needs to go back to work,’ says Ford

    Ford said his government wasn’t influenced by the bank mandates, but said business leaders he’d spoken with agree “everyone needs to go back to work.”

    “We look forward to having everyone back; we’re very grateful for the work they do. We have the best public service in Canada and I appreciate the work they do every day,” he said.

    Ontario’s top bureaucrat, Secretary of Cabinet Michelle DiEmanuele, said in a memo obtained by CBC News that the decision “is in line with an increasing number of organizations across the public and private sectors.”

    The province’s move comes just two weeks after it reached a new collective agreement with AMAPCEO, which represents some 14,000 professional, administrative and supervisory employees in the Ontario Public Service.

    The province was “hellbent on removing” employees’ options for remote work during those negotiations, says AMAPCEO president Dave Bulmer.

    “I am incensed by this morning’s announcement,” said Bulmer in a message to union members. “We have shown that we can, and should, be treated as the capable, trustworthy professionals we are — professionals capable of working for Ontario from anywhere.”

    Bulmer says there should be no changes for provincial employees who have a formal, signed agreement allowing them to work remotely, and says AMAPCEO members who want to work remotely should make an official request now.

    Officials from OPSEU, the union that represents roughly half of the Ontario Public Service workforce, said they will issue a statement in response to the changes later on Thursday.

    The provincial government’s single-largest office space in Toronto, the Macdonald Block complex, is undergoing a $1.5 billion renovation and has been shut down for six years.

    Staff of several provincial ministries have since been working from rented office space scattered around the city’s downtown.

    Federal government employees are currently subject to a three-days-per-week minimum in the workplace, imposed last September. There’s been some evidence since that the policy is not being strictly enforced.

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR

    Mike Crawley

    Senior reporter

    Mike Crawley has covered Ontario politics for CBC News since 2009. He began his career as a newspaper reporter in B.C., spent six years as a freelance journalist in various parts of Africa, then joined the CBC in 2005. Mike was born and raised in Saint John, N.B.

    With files from Sarah Petz

    D This user is from outside of this forum
    D This user is from outside of this forum
    doubleohdonut@lemmy.ca
    wrote on last edited by doubleohdonut@lemmy.ca
    #8

    “How do you mentor someone over a phone? You can’t. You’ve got to look at them eye to eye,” Ford said during an unrelated news conference Thursday in Pickering.

    Just because you are personally incapable of growth, don’t inflict it on the rest of us!

    Ford said his government wasn’t influenced by the bank mandates, but said business leaders he’d spoken with agree “everyone needs to go back to work.”

    Aren’t politians meant to represent the will of the people? Doug’s always listened to his corporate buddies though.

    M N 2 Replies Last reply
    17
    • N narrativebear@lemmy.world

      “Ford also suggested having provincial workers return to the office is better for the economy, pointing out that many small businesses that rely on foot traffic from office workers have [suffered due to remote work policies]”

      This basically assumes if you work from home you never leave, dont order in, or don’t shop in the stores in your area. What if I work from home but I walk to my corner bagel store for breakfast every morning? What’s going to happen to the bagel store in my neighborhood if I need to now drive 1-2hrs into the city?

      hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH This user is from outside of this forum
      hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH This user is from outside of this forum
      hiddenlayer555@lemmy.ml
      wrote on last edited by hiddenlayer555@lemmy.ml
      #9

      Also, this is more of a symptom of the dumb as hell separation of commercial and residential development that Canada is just barely now overcoming (and even then we’re not upgrading neighbourhoods to mixed zoning unless the entire area is being torn down and redeveloped). You have tons of Downtown businesses that rely on the influx of commuters to operate while people working from home wanting to go to a restaurant are out of luck because their entire district bans commercial buildings of any kind.

      C 1 Reply Last reply
      13
      • hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH hiddenlayer555@lemmy.ml

        Dude was getting lonely not being able to micromanage the lives of government employees.

        Text of the article at the time of posting:

        Ontario ordering public servants back into office full time

        Current mandate of 3 days a week has been provincial government policy since April 2022

        Mike Crawley · CBC News · Posted: Aug 14, 2025 7:17 AM PDT | Last Updated: 1 hour ago

        Premier Doug Ford’s government is ordering Ontario public servants to work from the office four days a week starting this fall and then full-time in January.

        It’s a change from a policy that has been in place since April 2022, when provincial government employees were mandated to be in their offices at least three days per week.

        Employees of the Ontario Public Service, provincial agencies, boards and commissions must “increase their attendance to four days per week” starting Oct. 20 and transition to full-time hours in-office effective Jan. 5, 2026, said Treasury Board President Caroline Mulroney in an announcement Thursday.

        Ford says he believes government employees are more productive when they are in the office.

        “How do you mentor someone over a phone? You can’t. You’ve got to look at them eye to eye,” Ford said during an unrelated news conference Thursday in Pickering.

        Ford also suggested having provincial workers return to the office is better for the economy, pointing out that many small businesses that rely on foot traffic from office workers have suffered due to remote work policies.

        “There’s hard-working entrepreneurs that their business has basically just died when they weren’t seeing the flow of traffic.”

        The news follows on the heels of announcements by four of Canada’s big banks — RBC, Scotiabank, BMO and TD — that staff at their Toronto headquarters must spend at least four days a week in the office, effective this fall.

        ‘Everyone needs to go back to work,’ says Ford

        Ford said his government wasn’t influenced by the bank mandates, but said business leaders he’d spoken with agree “everyone needs to go back to work.”

        “We look forward to having everyone back; we’re very grateful for the work they do. We have the best public service in Canada and I appreciate the work they do every day,” he said.

        Ontario’s top bureaucrat, Secretary of Cabinet Michelle DiEmanuele, said in a memo obtained by CBC News that the decision “is in line with an increasing number of organizations across the public and private sectors.”

        The province’s move comes just two weeks after it reached a new collective agreement with AMAPCEO, which represents some 14,000 professional, administrative and supervisory employees in the Ontario Public Service.

        The province was “hellbent on removing” employees’ options for remote work during those negotiations, says AMAPCEO president Dave Bulmer.

        “I am incensed by this morning’s announcement,” said Bulmer in a message to union members. “We have shown that we can, and should, be treated as the capable, trustworthy professionals we are — professionals capable of working for Ontario from anywhere.”

        Bulmer says there should be no changes for provincial employees who have a formal, signed agreement allowing them to work remotely, and says AMAPCEO members who want to work remotely should make an official request now.

        Officials from OPSEU, the union that represents roughly half of the Ontario Public Service workforce, said they will issue a statement in response to the changes later on Thursday.

        The provincial government’s single-largest office space in Toronto, the Macdonald Block complex, is undergoing a $1.5 billion renovation and has been shut down for six years.

        Staff of several provincial ministries have since been working from rented office space scattered around the city’s downtown.

        Federal government employees are currently subject to a three-days-per-week minimum in the workplace, imposed last September. There’s been some evidence since that the policy is not being strictly enforced.

        ABOUT THE AUTHOR

        Mike Crawley

        Senior reporter

        Mike Crawley has covered Ontario politics for CBC News since 2009. He began his career as a newspaper reporter in B.C., spent six years as a freelance journalist in various parts of Africa, then joined the CBC in 2005. Mike was born and raised in Saint John, N.B.

        With files from Sarah Petz

        BeBopALouieB This user is from outside of this forum
        BeBopALouieB This user is from outside of this forum
        BeBopALouie
        wrote on last edited by
        #10

        The only thing fascist, narcissistic fuck ford cares about is lining his and his cronies pockets.

        1 Reply Last reply
        14
        • hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH hiddenlayer555@lemmy.ml

          Also, this is more of a symptom of the dumb as hell separation of commercial and residential development that Canada is just barely now overcoming (and even then we’re not upgrading neighbourhoods to mixed zoning unless the entire area is being torn down and redeveloped). You have tons of Downtown businesses that rely on the influx of commuters to operate while people working from home wanting to go to a restaurant are out of luck because their entire district bans commercial buildings of any kind.

          C This user is from outside of this forum
          C This user is from outside of this forum
          corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
          wrote on last edited by
          #11

          Heh. On the ground floor of this building is a restaurant. Mixed-use isn’t futuristic; it’s just sensible. I hope we can get over this bungalow addiction and get more mixed-use neighbourhoods like this one.

          hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH 1 Reply Last reply
          7
          • B bedsharkpal@lemmy.ca

            As a tax payer, fuck this guy for wasting resources. As a person who drives, fuck this guy for making traffic worse. As a human, fuck this guy for making the lives of my fellow citizens worse.

            Fuck this guy. Who can I call or email to say this is not ok?

            C This user is from outside of this forum
            C This user is from outside of this forum
            corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
            wrote on last edited by
            #12

            As a tax-payer, ask him how the new train line is coming along.

            Insiders say it’s as fucked now as it was a year ago, as the experienced talent is churning through in a swirling torrent of frustration. You can’t “rockstar contributor” around “shit management” at any rate.

            1 Reply Last reply
            12
            • C corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca

              Heh. On the ground floor of this building is a restaurant. Mixed-use isn’t futuristic; it’s just sensible. I hope we can get over this bungalow addiction and get more mixed-use neighbourhoods like this one.

              hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH This user is from outside of this forum
              hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH This user is from outside of this forum
              hiddenlayer555@lemmy.ml
              wrote on last edited by hiddenlayer555@lemmy.ml
              #13

              The commercial first floor and residential higher floors configuration has been used as early as Carthage. It’s literally ancient history yet our governments are shocked when it works so well.

              1 Reply Last reply
              8
              • hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH hiddenlayer555@lemmy.ml

                Dude was getting lonely not being able to micromanage the lives of government employees.

                Text of the article at the time of posting:

                Ontario ordering public servants back into office full time

                Current mandate of 3 days a week has been provincial government policy since April 2022

                Mike Crawley · CBC News · Posted: Aug 14, 2025 7:17 AM PDT | Last Updated: 1 hour ago

                Premier Doug Ford’s government is ordering Ontario public servants to work from the office four days a week starting this fall and then full-time in January.

                It’s a change from a policy that has been in place since April 2022, when provincial government employees were mandated to be in their offices at least three days per week.

                Employees of the Ontario Public Service, provincial agencies, boards and commissions must “increase their attendance to four days per week” starting Oct. 20 and transition to full-time hours in-office effective Jan. 5, 2026, said Treasury Board President Caroline Mulroney in an announcement Thursday.

                Ford says he believes government employees are more productive when they are in the office.

                “How do you mentor someone over a phone? You can’t. You’ve got to look at them eye to eye,” Ford said during an unrelated news conference Thursday in Pickering.

                Ford also suggested having provincial workers return to the office is better for the economy, pointing out that many small businesses that rely on foot traffic from office workers have suffered due to remote work policies.

                “There’s hard-working entrepreneurs that their business has basically just died when they weren’t seeing the flow of traffic.”

                The news follows on the heels of announcements by four of Canada’s big banks — RBC, Scotiabank, BMO and TD — that staff at their Toronto headquarters must spend at least four days a week in the office, effective this fall.

                ‘Everyone needs to go back to work,’ says Ford

                Ford said his government wasn’t influenced by the bank mandates, but said business leaders he’d spoken with agree “everyone needs to go back to work.”

                “We look forward to having everyone back; we’re very grateful for the work they do. We have the best public service in Canada and I appreciate the work they do every day,” he said.

                Ontario’s top bureaucrat, Secretary of Cabinet Michelle DiEmanuele, said in a memo obtained by CBC News that the decision “is in line with an increasing number of organizations across the public and private sectors.”

                The province’s move comes just two weeks after it reached a new collective agreement with AMAPCEO, which represents some 14,000 professional, administrative and supervisory employees in the Ontario Public Service.

                The province was “hellbent on removing” employees’ options for remote work during those negotiations, says AMAPCEO president Dave Bulmer.

                “I am incensed by this morning’s announcement,” said Bulmer in a message to union members. “We have shown that we can, and should, be treated as the capable, trustworthy professionals we are — professionals capable of working for Ontario from anywhere.”

                Bulmer says there should be no changes for provincial employees who have a formal, signed agreement allowing them to work remotely, and says AMAPCEO members who want to work remotely should make an official request now.

                Officials from OPSEU, the union that represents roughly half of the Ontario Public Service workforce, said they will issue a statement in response to the changes later on Thursday.

                The provincial government’s single-largest office space in Toronto, the Macdonald Block complex, is undergoing a $1.5 billion renovation and has been shut down for six years.

                Staff of several provincial ministries have since been working from rented office space scattered around the city’s downtown.

                Federal government employees are currently subject to a three-days-per-week minimum in the workplace, imposed last September. There’s been some evidence since that the policy is not being strictly enforced.

                ABOUT THE AUTHOR

                Mike Crawley

                Senior reporter

                Mike Crawley has covered Ontario politics for CBC News since 2009. He began his career as a newspaper reporter in B.C., spent six years as a freelance journalist in various parts of Africa, then joined the CBC in 2005. Mike was born and raised in Saint John, N.B.

                With files from Sarah Petz

                Em AdespotonA This user is from outside of this forum
                Em AdespotonA This user is from outside of this forum
                Em Adespoton
                wrote on last edited by
                #14

                I really don’t get that mentoring question. I’ve been mentoring employees remotely for over a decade. I’ve found it’s useful to have a few in-person meetups, but most work and career growth can very much be done remotely for any job involving information only.

                Obviously any job requiring physical manipulation of objects is going to have to be on site at least some of the time.

                B 1 Reply Last reply
                10
                • D doubleohdonut@lemmy.ca

                  “How do you mentor someone over a phone? You can’t. You’ve got to look at them eye to eye,” Ford said during an unrelated news conference Thursday in Pickering.

                  Just because you are personally incapable of growth, don’t inflict it on the rest of us!

                  Ford said his government wasn’t influenced by the bank mandates, but said business leaders he’d spoken with agree “everyone needs to go back to work.”

                  Aren’t politians meant to represent the will of the people? Doug’s always listened to his corporate buddies though.

                  M This user is from outside of this forum
                  M This user is from outside of this forum
                  melvin_ferd@lemmy.world
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #15

                  Also what’s wrong with a hybrid model or let individual teams decide. I can get all the learning needed in 2 days each week and the rest of the week can be over teams if needed. It’s a really good schedule for training

                  N 1 Reply Last reply
                  6
                  • hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH hiddenlayer555@lemmy.ml

                    Dude was getting lonely not being able to micromanage the lives of government employees.

                    Text of the article at the time of posting:

                    Ontario ordering public servants back into office full time

                    Current mandate of 3 days a week has been provincial government policy since April 2022

                    Mike Crawley · CBC News · Posted: Aug 14, 2025 7:17 AM PDT | Last Updated: 1 hour ago

                    Premier Doug Ford’s government is ordering Ontario public servants to work from the office four days a week starting this fall and then full-time in January.

                    It’s a change from a policy that has been in place since April 2022, when provincial government employees were mandated to be in their offices at least three days per week.

                    Employees of the Ontario Public Service, provincial agencies, boards and commissions must “increase their attendance to four days per week” starting Oct. 20 and transition to full-time hours in-office effective Jan. 5, 2026, said Treasury Board President Caroline Mulroney in an announcement Thursday.

                    Ford says he believes government employees are more productive when they are in the office.

                    “How do you mentor someone over a phone? You can’t. You’ve got to look at them eye to eye,” Ford said during an unrelated news conference Thursday in Pickering.

                    Ford also suggested having provincial workers return to the office is better for the economy, pointing out that many small businesses that rely on foot traffic from office workers have suffered due to remote work policies.

                    “There’s hard-working entrepreneurs that their business has basically just died when they weren’t seeing the flow of traffic.”

                    The news follows on the heels of announcements by four of Canada’s big banks — RBC, Scotiabank, BMO and TD — that staff at their Toronto headquarters must spend at least four days a week in the office, effective this fall.

                    ‘Everyone needs to go back to work,’ says Ford

                    Ford said his government wasn’t influenced by the bank mandates, but said business leaders he’d spoken with agree “everyone needs to go back to work.”

                    “We look forward to having everyone back; we’re very grateful for the work they do. We have the best public service in Canada and I appreciate the work they do every day,” he said.

                    Ontario’s top bureaucrat, Secretary of Cabinet Michelle DiEmanuele, said in a memo obtained by CBC News that the decision “is in line with an increasing number of organizations across the public and private sectors.”

                    The province’s move comes just two weeks after it reached a new collective agreement with AMAPCEO, which represents some 14,000 professional, administrative and supervisory employees in the Ontario Public Service.

                    The province was “hellbent on removing” employees’ options for remote work during those negotiations, says AMAPCEO president Dave Bulmer.

                    “I am incensed by this morning’s announcement,” said Bulmer in a message to union members. “We have shown that we can, and should, be treated as the capable, trustworthy professionals we are — professionals capable of working for Ontario from anywhere.”

                    Bulmer says there should be no changes for provincial employees who have a formal, signed agreement allowing them to work remotely, and says AMAPCEO members who want to work remotely should make an official request now.

                    Officials from OPSEU, the union that represents roughly half of the Ontario Public Service workforce, said they will issue a statement in response to the changes later on Thursday.

                    The provincial government’s single-largest office space in Toronto, the Macdonald Block complex, is undergoing a $1.5 billion renovation and has been shut down for six years.

                    Staff of several provincial ministries have since been working from rented office space scattered around the city’s downtown.

                    Federal government employees are currently subject to a three-days-per-week minimum in the workplace, imposed last September. There’s been some evidence since that the policy is not being strictly enforced.

                    ABOUT THE AUTHOR

                    Mike Crawley

                    Senior reporter

                    Mike Crawley has covered Ontario politics for CBC News since 2009. He began his career as a newspaper reporter in B.C., spent six years as a freelance journalist in various parts of Africa, then joined the CBC in 2005. Mike was born and raised in Saint John, N.B.

                    With files from Sarah Petz

                    ikidd@lemmy.worldI This user is from outside of this forum
                    ikidd@lemmy.worldI This user is from outside of this forum
                    ikidd@lemmy.world
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #16

                    Send them the bill for the commute time and mileage.

                    hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH B L 3 Replies Last reply
                    18
                    • hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH hiddenlayer555@lemmy.ml

                      Dude was getting lonely not being able to micromanage the lives of government employees.

                      Text of the article at the time of posting:

                      Ontario ordering public servants back into office full time

                      Current mandate of 3 days a week has been provincial government policy since April 2022

                      Mike Crawley · CBC News · Posted: Aug 14, 2025 7:17 AM PDT | Last Updated: 1 hour ago

                      Premier Doug Ford’s government is ordering Ontario public servants to work from the office four days a week starting this fall and then full-time in January.

                      It’s a change from a policy that has been in place since April 2022, when provincial government employees were mandated to be in their offices at least three days per week.

                      Employees of the Ontario Public Service, provincial agencies, boards and commissions must “increase their attendance to four days per week” starting Oct. 20 and transition to full-time hours in-office effective Jan. 5, 2026, said Treasury Board President Caroline Mulroney in an announcement Thursday.

                      Ford says he believes government employees are more productive when they are in the office.

                      “How do you mentor someone over a phone? You can’t. You’ve got to look at them eye to eye,” Ford said during an unrelated news conference Thursday in Pickering.

                      Ford also suggested having provincial workers return to the office is better for the economy, pointing out that many small businesses that rely on foot traffic from office workers have suffered due to remote work policies.

                      “There’s hard-working entrepreneurs that their business has basically just died when they weren’t seeing the flow of traffic.”

                      The news follows on the heels of announcements by four of Canada’s big banks — RBC, Scotiabank, BMO and TD — that staff at their Toronto headquarters must spend at least four days a week in the office, effective this fall.

                      ‘Everyone needs to go back to work,’ says Ford

                      Ford said his government wasn’t influenced by the bank mandates, but said business leaders he’d spoken with agree “everyone needs to go back to work.”

                      “We look forward to having everyone back; we’re very grateful for the work they do. We have the best public service in Canada and I appreciate the work they do every day,” he said.

                      Ontario’s top bureaucrat, Secretary of Cabinet Michelle DiEmanuele, said in a memo obtained by CBC News that the decision “is in line with an increasing number of organizations across the public and private sectors.”

                      The province’s move comes just two weeks after it reached a new collective agreement with AMAPCEO, which represents some 14,000 professional, administrative and supervisory employees in the Ontario Public Service.

                      The province was “hellbent on removing” employees’ options for remote work during those negotiations, says AMAPCEO president Dave Bulmer.

                      “I am incensed by this morning’s announcement,” said Bulmer in a message to union members. “We have shown that we can, and should, be treated as the capable, trustworthy professionals we are — professionals capable of working for Ontario from anywhere.”

                      Bulmer says there should be no changes for provincial employees who have a formal, signed agreement allowing them to work remotely, and says AMAPCEO members who want to work remotely should make an official request now.

                      Officials from OPSEU, the union that represents roughly half of the Ontario Public Service workforce, said they will issue a statement in response to the changes later on Thursday.

                      The provincial government’s single-largest office space in Toronto, the Macdonald Block complex, is undergoing a $1.5 billion renovation and has been shut down for six years.

                      Staff of several provincial ministries have since been working from rented office space scattered around the city’s downtown.

                      Federal government employees are currently subject to a three-days-per-week minimum in the workplace, imposed last September. There’s been some evidence since that the policy is not being strictly enforced.

                      ABOUT THE AUTHOR

                      Mike Crawley

                      Senior reporter

                      Mike Crawley has covered Ontario politics for CBC News since 2009. He began his career as a newspaper reporter in B.C., spent six years as a freelance journalist in various parts of Africa, then joined the CBC in 2005. Mike was born and raised in Saint John, N.B.

                      With files from Sarah Petz

                      S This user is from outside of this forum
                      S This user is from outside of this forum
                      some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #17

                      I hope they resign en-masse.

                      P 1 Reply Last reply
                      3
                      • ikidd@lemmy.worldI ikidd@lemmy.world

                        Send them the bill for the commute time and mileage.

                        hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH This user is from outside of this forum
                        hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH This user is from outside of this forum
                        hiddenlayer555@lemmy.ml
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #18

                        Or just leave your house when work time starts and leave work early to account for traveling home.

                        M 1 Reply Last reply
                        7
                        • ikidd@lemmy.worldI ikidd@lemmy.world

                          Send them the bill for the commute time and mileage.

                          B This user is from outside of this forum
                          B This user is from outside of this forum
                          bowreality@lemmy.ca
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #19

                          You know this wouldn’t ever be a mandate anywhere if we just make commute part of the work hours. Not even paying for parking, gas or transit. Just the time. All companies would immediately back down and order you to wfh.

                          ikidd@lemmy.worldI 1 Reply Last reply
                          13
                          • B bowreality@lemmy.ca

                            You know this wouldn’t ever be a mandate anywhere if we just make commute part of the work hours. Not even paying for parking, gas or transit. Just the time. All companies would immediately back down and order you to wfh.

                            ikidd@lemmy.worldI This user is from outside of this forum
                            ikidd@lemmy.worldI This user is from outside of this forum
                            ikidd@lemmy.world
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #20

                            They’d just make you live in the office.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            3
                            • ikidd@lemmy.worldI ikidd@lemmy.world

                              Send them the bill for the commute time and mileage.

                              L This user is from outside of this forum
                              L This user is from outside of this forum
                              labtec6@lemmy.ca
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #21

                              Or get another job. Many companies are doing this now. My company is doing this. I have to be at work 5 days a week anyway so it doesn’t matter to me but it was like this before COVID and companies are paying rent with few people there so they want them in. Find a company that will have you at home. It’s getting a lot harder now.

                              B 1 Reply Last reply
                              2
                              • D doubleohdonut@lemmy.ca

                                “How do you mentor someone over a phone? You can’t. You’ve got to look at them eye to eye,” Ford said during an unrelated news conference Thursday in Pickering.

                                Just because you are personally incapable of growth, don’t inflict it on the rest of us!

                                Ford said his government wasn’t influenced by the bank mandates, but said business leaders he’d spoken with agree “everyone needs to go back to work.”

                                Aren’t politians meant to represent the will of the people? Doug’s always listened to his corporate buddies though.

                                N This user is from outside of this forum
                                N This user is from outside of this forum
                                notmyoldredditname@lemmy.world
                                wrote on last edited by notmyoldredditname@lemmy.world
                                #22

                                Damn… I guess I never mentored anyone. Got paid for it though!

                                Edit: slack and video calls. Technically not phone.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                4
                                • M melvin_ferd@lemmy.world

                                  Also what’s wrong with a hybrid model or let individual teams decide. I can get all the learning needed in 2 days each week and the rest of the week can be over teams if needed. It’s a really good schedule for training

                                  N This user is from outside of this forum
                                  N This user is from outside of this forum
                                  notmyoldredditname@lemmy.world
                                  wrote on last edited by notmyoldredditname@lemmy.world
                                  #23

                                  Nothing.

                                  This is so Starbucks (and others) can keep all their stores open instead of having to close the ones that are every other block because there’s less people in the office.

                                  D 1 Reply Last reply
                                  2
                                  • hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH hiddenlayer555@lemmy.ml

                                    Dude was getting lonely not being able to micromanage the lives of government employees.

                                    Text of the article at the time of posting:

                                    Ontario ordering public servants back into office full time

                                    Current mandate of 3 days a week has been provincial government policy since April 2022

                                    Mike Crawley · CBC News · Posted: Aug 14, 2025 7:17 AM PDT | Last Updated: 1 hour ago

                                    Premier Doug Ford’s government is ordering Ontario public servants to work from the office four days a week starting this fall and then full-time in January.

                                    It’s a change from a policy that has been in place since April 2022, when provincial government employees were mandated to be in their offices at least three days per week.

                                    Employees of the Ontario Public Service, provincial agencies, boards and commissions must “increase their attendance to four days per week” starting Oct. 20 and transition to full-time hours in-office effective Jan. 5, 2026, said Treasury Board President Caroline Mulroney in an announcement Thursday.

                                    Ford says he believes government employees are more productive when they are in the office.

                                    “How do you mentor someone over a phone? You can’t. You’ve got to look at them eye to eye,” Ford said during an unrelated news conference Thursday in Pickering.

                                    Ford also suggested having provincial workers return to the office is better for the economy, pointing out that many small businesses that rely on foot traffic from office workers have suffered due to remote work policies.

                                    “There’s hard-working entrepreneurs that their business has basically just died when they weren’t seeing the flow of traffic.”

                                    The news follows on the heels of announcements by four of Canada’s big banks — RBC, Scotiabank, BMO and TD — that staff at their Toronto headquarters must spend at least four days a week in the office, effective this fall.

                                    ‘Everyone needs to go back to work,’ says Ford

                                    Ford said his government wasn’t influenced by the bank mandates, but said business leaders he’d spoken with agree “everyone needs to go back to work.”

                                    “We look forward to having everyone back; we’re very grateful for the work they do. We have the best public service in Canada and I appreciate the work they do every day,” he said.

                                    Ontario’s top bureaucrat, Secretary of Cabinet Michelle DiEmanuele, said in a memo obtained by CBC News that the decision “is in line with an increasing number of organizations across the public and private sectors.”

                                    The province’s move comes just two weeks after it reached a new collective agreement with AMAPCEO, which represents some 14,000 professional, administrative and supervisory employees in the Ontario Public Service.

                                    The province was “hellbent on removing” employees’ options for remote work during those negotiations, says AMAPCEO president Dave Bulmer.

                                    “I am incensed by this morning’s announcement,” said Bulmer in a message to union members. “We have shown that we can, and should, be treated as the capable, trustworthy professionals we are — professionals capable of working for Ontario from anywhere.”

                                    Bulmer says there should be no changes for provincial employees who have a formal, signed agreement allowing them to work remotely, and says AMAPCEO members who want to work remotely should make an official request now.

                                    Officials from OPSEU, the union that represents roughly half of the Ontario Public Service workforce, said they will issue a statement in response to the changes later on Thursday.

                                    The provincial government’s single-largest office space in Toronto, the Macdonald Block complex, is undergoing a $1.5 billion renovation and has been shut down for six years.

                                    Staff of several provincial ministries have since been working from rented office space scattered around the city’s downtown.

                                    Federal government employees are currently subject to a three-days-per-week minimum in the workplace, imposed last September. There’s been some evidence since that the policy is not being strictly enforced.

                                    ABOUT THE AUTHOR

                                    Mike Crawley

                                    Senior reporter

                                    Mike Crawley has covered Ontario politics for CBC News since 2009. He began his career as a newspaper reporter in B.C., spent six years as a freelance journalist in various parts of Africa, then joined the CBC in 2005. Mike was born and raised in Saint John, N.B.

                                    With files from Sarah Petz

                                    B This user is from outside of this forum
                                    B This user is from outside of this forum
                                    breadoven@lemmy.world
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #24

                                    Fuck Doug Ford.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    8
                                    • hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH hiddenlayer555@lemmy.ml

                                      Dude was getting lonely not being able to micromanage the lives of government employees.

                                      Text of the article at the time of posting:

                                      Ontario ordering public servants back into office full time

                                      Current mandate of 3 days a week has been provincial government policy since April 2022

                                      Mike Crawley · CBC News · Posted: Aug 14, 2025 7:17 AM PDT | Last Updated: 1 hour ago

                                      Premier Doug Ford’s government is ordering Ontario public servants to work from the office four days a week starting this fall and then full-time in January.

                                      It’s a change from a policy that has been in place since April 2022, when provincial government employees were mandated to be in their offices at least three days per week.

                                      Employees of the Ontario Public Service, provincial agencies, boards and commissions must “increase their attendance to four days per week” starting Oct. 20 and transition to full-time hours in-office effective Jan. 5, 2026, said Treasury Board President Caroline Mulroney in an announcement Thursday.

                                      Ford says he believes government employees are more productive when they are in the office.

                                      “How do you mentor someone over a phone? You can’t. You’ve got to look at them eye to eye,” Ford said during an unrelated news conference Thursday in Pickering.

                                      Ford also suggested having provincial workers return to the office is better for the economy, pointing out that many small businesses that rely on foot traffic from office workers have suffered due to remote work policies.

                                      “There’s hard-working entrepreneurs that their business has basically just died when they weren’t seeing the flow of traffic.”

                                      The news follows on the heels of announcements by four of Canada’s big banks — RBC, Scotiabank, BMO and TD — that staff at their Toronto headquarters must spend at least four days a week in the office, effective this fall.

                                      ‘Everyone needs to go back to work,’ says Ford

                                      Ford said his government wasn’t influenced by the bank mandates, but said business leaders he’d spoken with agree “everyone needs to go back to work.”

                                      “We look forward to having everyone back; we’re very grateful for the work they do. We have the best public service in Canada and I appreciate the work they do every day,” he said.

                                      Ontario’s top bureaucrat, Secretary of Cabinet Michelle DiEmanuele, said in a memo obtained by CBC News that the decision “is in line with an increasing number of organizations across the public and private sectors.”

                                      The province’s move comes just two weeks after it reached a new collective agreement with AMAPCEO, which represents some 14,000 professional, administrative and supervisory employees in the Ontario Public Service.

                                      The province was “hellbent on removing” employees’ options for remote work during those negotiations, says AMAPCEO president Dave Bulmer.

                                      “I am incensed by this morning’s announcement,” said Bulmer in a message to union members. “We have shown that we can, and should, be treated as the capable, trustworthy professionals we are — professionals capable of working for Ontario from anywhere.”

                                      Bulmer says there should be no changes for provincial employees who have a formal, signed agreement allowing them to work remotely, and says AMAPCEO members who want to work remotely should make an official request now.

                                      Officials from OPSEU, the union that represents roughly half of the Ontario Public Service workforce, said they will issue a statement in response to the changes later on Thursday.

                                      The provincial government’s single-largest office space in Toronto, the Macdonald Block complex, is undergoing a $1.5 billion renovation and has been shut down for six years.

                                      Staff of several provincial ministries have since been working from rented office space scattered around the city’s downtown.

                                      Federal government employees are currently subject to a three-days-per-week minimum in the workplace, imposed last September. There’s been some evidence since that the policy is not being strictly enforced.

                                      ABOUT THE AUTHOR

                                      Mike Crawley

                                      Senior reporter

                                      Mike Crawley has covered Ontario politics for CBC News since 2009. He began his career as a newspaper reporter in B.C., spent six years as a freelance journalist in various parts of Africa, then joined the CBC in 2005. Mike was born and raised in Saint John, N.B.

                                      With files from Sarah Petz

                                      P This user is from outside of this forum
                                      P This user is from outside of this forum
                                      panda_abyss@lemmy.ca
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #25

                                      It’s not “go back to work”

                                      I work remotely and get a lot done. I do way more than my peers.

                                      It’s wait in traffic unpaid, but a shitty lunch, drink shitty coffee, poop in someone else’s toilet with neighbours, not have access to all my reference books or have to lug them around, then I get to work with a shittier chair, stare at a cheap fuzzy monitor that bugs my eyes, and not have any privacy or quiet to focus.

                                      There was one time I had a corner office, with a door, and a stocked bar, and was allowed beers at lunch (I would class problems as zero, one, or two beer problems). But everything since then has been awful open plans or hot desking, and the beer has all dried up.

                                      My home office wins by a mile.

                                      B 1 Reply Last reply
                                      12
                                      • N notmyoldredditname@lemmy.world

                                        Nothing.

                                        This is so Starbucks (and others) can keep all their stores open instead of having to close the ones that are every other block because there’s less people in the office.

                                        D This user is from outside of this forum
                                        D This user is from outside of this forum
                                        doubleohdonut@lemmy.ca
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #26

                                        Which, as another commenter noted, is ridiculous. If you can’t run a functional office with work from home employees, you’re really just showcasing how piss poor of a manager you are. Can it be turned around by a younger generation stepping in to show how its done? I’d sure like to think so.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        1
                                        • hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH hiddenlayer555@lemmy.ml

                                          Dude was getting lonely not being able to micromanage the lives of government employees.

                                          Text of the article at the time of posting:

                                          Ontario ordering public servants back into office full time

                                          Current mandate of 3 days a week has been provincial government policy since April 2022

                                          Mike Crawley · CBC News · Posted: Aug 14, 2025 7:17 AM PDT | Last Updated: 1 hour ago

                                          Premier Doug Ford’s government is ordering Ontario public servants to work from the office four days a week starting this fall and then full-time in January.

                                          It’s a change from a policy that has been in place since April 2022, when provincial government employees were mandated to be in their offices at least three days per week.

                                          Employees of the Ontario Public Service, provincial agencies, boards and commissions must “increase their attendance to four days per week” starting Oct. 20 and transition to full-time hours in-office effective Jan. 5, 2026, said Treasury Board President Caroline Mulroney in an announcement Thursday.

                                          Ford says he believes government employees are more productive when they are in the office.

                                          “How do you mentor someone over a phone? You can’t. You’ve got to look at them eye to eye,” Ford said during an unrelated news conference Thursday in Pickering.

                                          Ford also suggested having provincial workers return to the office is better for the economy, pointing out that many small businesses that rely on foot traffic from office workers have suffered due to remote work policies.

                                          “There’s hard-working entrepreneurs that their business has basically just died when they weren’t seeing the flow of traffic.”

                                          The news follows on the heels of announcements by four of Canada’s big banks — RBC, Scotiabank, BMO and TD — that staff at their Toronto headquarters must spend at least four days a week in the office, effective this fall.

                                          ‘Everyone needs to go back to work,’ says Ford

                                          Ford said his government wasn’t influenced by the bank mandates, but said business leaders he’d spoken with agree “everyone needs to go back to work.”

                                          “We look forward to having everyone back; we’re very grateful for the work they do. We have the best public service in Canada and I appreciate the work they do every day,” he said.

                                          Ontario’s top bureaucrat, Secretary of Cabinet Michelle DiEmanuele, said in a memo obtained by CBC News that the decision “is in line with an increasing number of organizations across the public and private sectors.”

                                          The province’s move comes just two weeks after it reached a new collective agreement with AMAPCEO, which represents some 14,000 professional, administrative and supervisory employees in the Ontario Public Service.

                                          The province was “hellbent on removing” employees’ options for remote work during those negotiations, says AMAPCEO president Dave Bulmer.

                                          “I am incensed by this morning’s announcement,” said Bulmer in a message to union members. “We have shown that we can, and should, be treated as the capable, trustworthy professionals we are — professionals capable of working for Ontario from anywhere.”

                                          Bulmer says there should be no changes for provincial employees who have a formal, signed agreement allowing them to work remotely, and says AMAPCEO members who want to work remotely should make an official request now.

                                          Officials from OPSEU, the union that represents roughly half of the Ontario Public Service workforce, said they will issue a statement in response to the changes later on Thursday.

                                          The provincial government’s single-largest office space in Toronto, the Macdonald Block complex, is undergoing a $1.5 billion renovation and has been shut down for six years.

                                          Staff of several provincial ministries have since been working from rented office space scattered around the city’s downtown.

                                          Federal government employees are currently subject to a three-days-per-week minimum in the workplace, imposed last September. There’s been some evidence since that the policy is not being strictly enforced.

                                          ABOUT THE AUTHOR

                                          Mike Crawley

                                          Senior reporter

                                          Mike Crawley has covered Ontario politics for CBC News since 2009. He began his career as a newspaper reporter in B.C., spent six years as a freelance journalist in various parts of Africa, then joined the CBC in 2005. Mike was born and raised in Saint John, N.B.

                                          With files from Sarah Petz

                                          R This user is from outside of this forum
                                          R This user is from outside of this forum
                                          rebelsimile@sh.itjust.works
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #27

                                          Gosh I’ve never seen Doug ford legislate in my presence, how can he do his job by television? What a lazy shithead, he needs to get to work, by being in my specific presence. Genius fuck.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
                                          3

                                          Reply
                                          • Reply as topic
                                          Log in to reply
                                          • Oldest to Newest
                                          • Newest to Oldest
                                          • Most Votes


                                          • Login

                                          • Login or register to search.
                                          Powered by NodeBB Contributors
                                          • First post
                                            Last post