Los Angeles Times

Apple delays return to office

- By Mark Gurman Gurman writes for Bloomberg.

Apple Inc., responding to a surge in coronaviru­s cases, is pushing back its office reopening by at least a month to October at the earliest and recommendi­ng that workers at its retail stores wear masks, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The iPhone maker is one of the first U.S. tech giants to delay plans for a return to normality as the coronaviru­s and its highly transmissi­ble variants persist around the world. Apple will give employees at least a month’s warning before mandating a return to offices, the people said, asking for anonymity to discuss internal policy.

Store workers, vaccinated or not, are being urged to start wearing masks again, other people familiar with the matter said. In regions where local authoritie­s have reinstated mask mandates, retail workers must comply, the company told employees. Apple had dropped its internal mask mandate in June.

Chief Executive Tim Cook told employees in June that they should begin returning to offices by early September for at least three days a week. In an internal memo at the time, Cook cited the availabili­ty of vaccinatio­ns and declining infection rates. Some employees of the Cupertino, Calif.based technology giant have worked from Apple offices on certain days throughout the COVID-19 pandemic.

Yet even with half the U.S. vaccinated, COVID-19 continues to kill people faster than guns, car crashes and influenza combined, according to a Bloomberg review of mortality data. After 10 weeks of global declines in COVID deaths, the highly transmissi­ble Delta variant is driving a new uptick. In the U.S., health officials have warned that a similar reversal may be underway: Daily cases have doubled from a low point last month, and hospitaliz­ations are rising again.

Corporatio­ns across the globe are grappling with how to adjust to shifting work demands these days. Apple’s decision comes as its own employees criticized the September deadline as too early. In an email to employees about the return delay, Apple cited COVID-19 rather than employee concerns about limited remote options.

Apple shares rose 2.6% on Tuesday to $146.15. An Apple spokeswoma­n declined to comment on the postponeme­nt.

When Apple employees are eventually required to return, they are expected to work from the office on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays. Wednesdays and Fridays will be optionally remote for some staff members; those working on hardware will be required to work from the office four or five days per week. Apple also said it would offer staff members two weeks of remote work annually. The hybrid return-to-work arrangemen­t is a pilot, Apple told its staff, and will be reevaluate­d next year.

Even before COVID, the company had grappled with a potential loss of talent as workers — despite being relatively high earners — complained they could barely afford the cost of living in the San Francisco Bay Area. Just a few years after completing the multibilli­ondollar Apple Park headquarte­rs in Cupertino, Apple is ramping up efforts to decentrali­ze out of Silicon Valley.

In the tech industry, many workers have come to view remote work as a coveted perk. Several Silicon Valley companies have been bringing workers back to the office only slowly. Facebook Inc. has said it will expand the number of employees who can work remotely even after the pandemic. And Alphabet Inc.’s Google recently introduced a more permissive return-to-work policy that allows staff members to work from different locations or from home.

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