Vologda69 wrote: » Our department is offering us three days at home. But all our work can be monitored since its tasked and we are not public facing.
James2020App wrote: » Is that going to be the case post COVID-19 or just for the interim period, until some sort of normality resumes? Our department as of yet has not confirmed anything. They appear to be keeping their cards very close to their chest. The new strains etc. are not helping though. In a similar situation here, not public facing and can for the most part be done pretty well from home.
exitstageleft wrote: » Hey Vologda69, Did they say how long you're in-office induction training will last? Will it be few weeks or more like a few months? I'm due to start shortly and while I understand there is some WFH I'm curious to know how many 5 day weeks I'll need to be in Dublin at the start.
doc22 wrote: » Civil Service WFH policy will be determined by the Department of Public Expenditure and Reform, I doubt any department is offering a written three days work at home policy. It might be 2/3 days initially after covid but long term it'll be a different story. I can't see one department doing a solo run. Unions/DEPR won't have one department doing one thing and another something else.
Augme wrote: » I know of departments that already allowed wfh to some staff pre covid. DPER will offer certain criteria and guidelines but I doubt they will go much above that. DPER preference generally seems to be to try and get involved in things as little as possible. Like short working year etc, I expect departments to very much be given the freedom to make their own decisions on this.
CivilServantCP wrote: » Lads, I can't see how they can justify making the office attendance mandatory ever again with the introduction of the Connect hubs, Rural Ireland Regeneration plan, Make Remote Work campaign, commitment to lower carbon footprint, massive success, and support for 16 months of remote working. Leo himself has said on the record multiple times that people should be allowed to work from home or close to home in a hub post pandemic. I hope Forsa are strong on this! The work life balance of not having a 12 hour day commuting is life changing.
doc22 wrote: » I can't see one department doing a solo run. Unions/DEPR won't have one department doing one thing and another something else.
doc22 wrote: » In my opinion, WFH will be like flexi, salary and annual leave entitlements departments just can't make up their own rules.
Alonzo Mosley wrote: » My department has just announced WFH one day a week from September 6th and two days from October 4th. They also will have a scheme in place for 2021.
BrianD3 wrote: » Anyone think that this could turn into one of the biggest workplace relations issues in the history of the public service. I base this my own experience and what I've been hearing about attitudes to WFH in parts of the PS. The unions need to be all over it which they weren't during the pandemic. Staff who had been working well from home were ordered back to the office for no good reason and in contravention of public health guidelines. If managers were vehemently anti WFH in this situation, what will they be like when the pandemic is over. If the government truly wants to "make remote work", very clear instruction need to be issued to every public service body. No flippant dismissing of WFH "for business reasons". Onus needs to be on the employer to demonstrate why WFH not possible. Before the pandemic, there was a limited amount of WFH in public service bodies but no actual policies to my knowledge. Allocated on an ad hoc basis, based on the whims of managers, on whether a person was awkward or not etc. Also, WFH of 1/2 or 1 day per week offered to some people to placate them after they had been treated badly for some reason, like bribing a child with sweets. I wonder do a lot of PS managers see themselves like teachers of bold children and in general have a school mentality. Lots of lifers (who often came straight from school or college) very resistant to change with little or no experience of private sector employment.
James2020App wrote: » That is interesting, just curious was it just a select few who could WFH pre-covid and how many days a week around would you be talking?
[Deleted User] wrote: » I'm CS and have been WFH since 2019. Only one person in my section didn't WFH at least one day a week - everyone else did at least one day a week, and at every grade level. I began with one day a week as a trial run, then moved to two days (which is 50% of my four day week), just before covid happened. I have heard anecdotally that there may be a limit of 50% WFH allowed, but I couldn't point you to a link on it. As for different departments, I believe it will end up running along the same lines as flexible working hours - which each department can operate differently. Some are more flexible then others. I think WFH will end up being a privilege, not a right, that you can apply for and granted / denied based on business needs. Which means if you have a good supervisor, you're gold. If you've an asshole, you're screwed. What is in our favour, is that its in the Programme for Government.
Deleted User wrote: » I have heard anecdotally that there may be a limit of 50% WFH allowed, but I couldn't point you to a link on it.
CivilServantCP wrote: » We all have a responsibility to take to social media and talk to our local TDs and Forsa reps, etc. We can’t all sit back waiting to see what happens. People need to be writing replies to Forsa, Dper and the likes on Twitter. We need to lobby for the changes we want and show people that there is an overwhelming want for change. We need to do this and encourage like minded people we work with to do the same.
BrianD3 wrote: » I wonder if the following scenario might play out - an employee who could WFH requests it but it is refused. The employee points out that their duties could be done from home and they have objective evidence that their work was done effectively during the pandemic. The employer responds by changing their duties to duties which are only possible in the office.
blue_blue wrote: » I can see CS/PS offering 40% WFH (2 out of 5 days). It'll be a perk like flexitime.
Deleted User wrote: » We also all have a responsibility to do the job we're paid to do. Contacting your elected representatives because you want more favourable working conditions smacks of privilege and entitlement. You're the employee, here, you don't get to demand everything is moulded to your satisfaction. Not everywhere will be offering WFH to the level everybody wants Not everywhere will, crucially, BE ABLE to offer it to the level everybody wants Throwing your toys out of the pram because your job won't accommodate your wants is the actions of a toddler. I'd like an extra 20k, a parking space and my own office.....should I contact FORSA and take to twitter?
doc22 wrote: » or instead of flexitime