The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Working from home, who pays for toilet paper?

- TOBY STERLING

AMSTERDAM — As the world convulses in crisis, and tens of millions of us dig in for the long haul of working from home, one question looms large: who pays for the tea and toilet paper?

The answer, according to the Dutch, is your bosses.

And how much? About C$3.12 per working day, on average.

That’s meant to cover not only coffee, tea and toilet paper used in work hours, but also the extra gas, electricit­y and water, plus the depreciati­on costs of a desk and a chair — all essentials that you’d never dream of paying for in the office.

“We have literally calculated down to how many teaspoons there are in an average household, so from there it’s not that difficult to establish the costs,” said Gabrielle Bettonvill­e of family finances institutio­n NIBUD, which is mainly funded by the government and researched the extra costs of remote working.

Such accounting may seem somewhat trivial at a time when the world is overwhelme­d by a once-ina-century pandemic, yet they are relevant as experts predict a deep decline in office-based work could be a permanent legacy of the crisis.

Dutch authoritie­s have already started applying NIBUD’s research, citing it to offer bureaucrat­s working from home a C$566.84 COVID-19 “bonus” this year, starting in March when the country went into lockdown.

Of course, the C$3.12 a day is for an average worker with average costs, but can be tweaked depending on measures such as home heating and water costs, or the quality of insulation.

It does not cover new furniture, computers, phones, or other equipment which NIBUD says employees should receive from their employers if necessary for their work.

Other countries are also moving to adjust to the new work-from-home reality, aware that many employees have little appetite to return to the office full-time even once the pandemic has passed.

Spain has obliged employers to pay for home office maintenanc­e and equipment; Germany is debating a bill enshrining remote workers’ rights; France has passed a law shielding them from afterhours email; while Britain has hinted that it may relax the rules on tax deductions for work-related equipment purchased during the pandemic.

But few nations have delved into the detail as deeply as the Dutch.

“The government has set a good example here,” said Jose Kager of FNV, the country’s largest labour union, which wants all home-workers to receive compensati­on along the lines laid out by NIBUD.

“We’re talking about structural, ongoing costs of working from home,” she added.

Many of FNV’s members still have to physically show up for work, such as those at paintmaker AkzoNobel’s factories and Heineken’s breweries. But most bank workers, insurance company employees, call centre staffers and many others have been working from home since March. Around 80 per cent of Dutch workers are covered by collective labour agreements.

Bank ABN Amro pays for workers to outfit their home offices, but routine expenses remain an open question. Spokesman Jarco de Swart said the bank did not believe workers would ever work from the office more than three days a week.

However, as ever, there’s two sides to the story. And bosses argue extra payments make little sense at a time when the coronaviru­s crisis has floored the economy.

Dutch employers’ associatio­n AWVN spokesman Jannes van der Velde said the NIBUD calculatio­ns did not reflect all the benefits home workers were enjoying.

“This call from unions for everybody to get compensati­on because people are now making their own coffee at home — one might observe that workers are also getting a lot of free time in exchange,” he said, citing average time savings of one hour on daily commutes.

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