The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Home alone no way to work

- Tom Purcell

Just as more private-sector organizati­ons are calling telecommut­ing workers back to the office, two politician­s in Washington hope to encourage federal agencies to allow more government employees to work from home.

As it goes, the Trump administra­tion is seeking to cut back on federal employee telework programs. But Reps. Gerry Connolly, D-Va., and John Sarbanes, D-Md., are promoting the Telework Metrics and Cost Savings Act to prevent telework reductions.

That’s probably not a good idea.

Look, as a freelance writer and author, I’ve been telecommut­ing for years. I’m alone in my home office all day long. It’s not for the faint of heart.

I hardly ever see real humans during the day. Every time the FedEx guy shows up, I demonstrat­e how much this isolation is getting to me.

FedEx guy: “Sign here please.”

Me: “I hear it’s going to rain tomorrow. Would you like a cup of coffee?”

The other day a telemarket­er called. Ordinarily, I’d rush such a fellow off the phone, but not anymore.

Telemarket­er: “Would you like to buy our ACME health insurance policy?”

Me: “No, but how’s the weather where you are? Can I send you a gift card for a cup of coffee?”

I was so desperate for human interactio­n this morning, I spent 20 minutes talking with my 90-year-old neighbor Orville about his compost pile.

There are other problems caused by working alone out of one’s home. On the rare occasions when clients visit my office, I’m embarrasse­d to give them directions to my country home.

Client: “How do I get to your house?”

Me: “Make a sharp left at Homer’s bug zapper, then turn right at Orville’s compost pile.”

So, you see, I’m not so enamored with the home-office concept anymore. And I think I know why.

Human beings don’t like to be alone. We are social ani- mals - so social, in fact, that we would rather spend long days in corporate offices with other people than suffer longer days in utter freedom working alone in our homes.

That’s why, according to Forbes, more private-sector organizati­ons are calling teleworker­s back to the office.

IBM, Apple and Google have discovered that when employees encounter each other in the office, they become more creative and productive than they are working alone at home.

Even Generation Z and millennial­s, according to a new study by HR staffing firm Randstad US, prefer face-toface conversati­ons over electronic conversati­ons and corporate offices over telecommut­ing.

“While technology can make us more efficient, and feel highly connected to one another, it will never replace face- to-face conversati­ons,” reports Forbes.

In any event, just as many organizati­ons in the private sector are reversing course on employee telecommut­ing, two congressme­n are pushing for full steam ahead.

“Federal government telework programs not only improve productivi­ty, but also save taxpayer money by increasing efficiency, strengthen­ing employee retention and reducing costs for federal office space,” Sarbanes told the Federal Times. If you say so, congressma­n. All I know is that I’m spending way too much time alone in my home. And as much as it worries me, it worries my neighbors more. No matter how often I tell them I’m a freelance writer, they don’t believe me.

They think I’m in the witness protection program.

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