Calgary Herald

Coronaviru­s surge thwarts banks' back-to-office plans

- KEVIN ORLAND

A recent surge in COVID-19 cases is derailing Canadian banks' plans to bring employees back to offices, with one lender even asking some workers who had already returned to go back home.

Canada is now facing about 5,000 new COVID-19 cases a day, prompting provinces and cities including Toronto — home to the country's five biggest banks — to implement new restrictio­ns to limit the virus spread. Even Prime Minister Justin Trudeau recently returned to working from home.

Bank of Montreal and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce are extending work-from-home plans for some employees until at least April, while National Bank of Canada is prolonging such measures for corporate-office staff until the end of June. Toronto-dominion Bank hasn't set a firm date for a return, but said in a memo last week that most people working from home won't come back “until at least the spring.”

Royal Bank of Canada even encouraged employees who had gone back to offices to return to working at home as of Nov. 16, according to a memo from chief human resources officer Helena Gottschlin­g. Canada's second-largest lender by assets said it will continue pre-screening and requiring masks and distancing for those who can't work remotely.

“Our ongoing protocols will continue to protect employees' health and safety in the workplace,” Gottschlin­g said in the Nov. 12 memo.

The bank hasn't set a firm time for employees to return. Royal Bank also delayed plans to have employees retrieve personal items from work sites in and around Toronto until further notice.

Bank of Nova Scotia also hasn't set a specific time for office employees to return because of “uncertaint­y around how the COVID-19 pandemic will unfold in the coming months,” according to a spokesman. Canada's third-biggest bank said workers will receive at least four weeks notice before being asked to return.

Bank of Montreal doesn't “foresee any broad-based changes for employees who are currently working from home any sooner than April 2021, unless a specific business need exists,” the company said in an emailed statement. The country's fourth-largest lender previously said workers would remain out of the office until the end of this year. The bank will give employees 30 days notice before asking them to return.

The decision by Montreal-based National Bank to extend work from home until June 30 was for “containing the spread of the virus and giving as much clarity as possible to parents up to the end of the school year,” spokesman Claude Breton said in an email.

 ?? STEPHANIE FODEN/ BLOOMBERG FILES ?? CIBC is among banks extending work-from-home plans for some staff amid a COVID resurgence in Canada.
STEPHANIE FODEN/ BLOOMBERG FILES CIBC is among banks extending work-from-home plans for some staff amid a COVID resurgence in Canada.

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