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Tag: Directive

  • Federal return-to-office directive will hurt productivity, survey respondents say


    After President Donald Trump directed agencies to return the federal workforce to the office full-time, many federal employees said productivity will suffer under a blanket return-to-office mandate, according to the results of a Federal News Network survey.

    Many survey respondents said the Trump administration should look more closely at the massive variations in jobs across government — and therefore the need for variations in telework policies too. Some respondents who filled out Federal News Network’s online survey of more than 4,600 federal employees expressed concerns about potential negative impacts of a “one-size-fits-all” return-to-office mandate.

    “They need to look at individual agencies and individual jobs,” one survey respondent wrote. “Some jobs just do not need to be done in office — and some absolutely should.”

    Currently, more than half of the federal workforce reports to work onsite due to the nature of their jobs. Employees who are eligible for telework are spending about 60% of their work hours, on average, in the office. Trump’s executive action Monday called on agencies to return their federal employees to fully in-office work “as soon as practicable.”

    It’s unclear how or when Trump’s return-to-office directive to agencies will be implemented, but many feds in the survey felt negatively about the potential end results of the mandate as it’s written. When asked what factors would be most adversely impacted under a return-to-office order, close to 71% of Federal News Network survey respondents said the commute — making it the number one selection among survey takers. Work-life balance was the second-most selected option, with 68% saying it would worsen under a return-to-office mandate.

    Return to office survey results
    Source: Federal News Network January 2025 return-to-office survey of 4,600 federal employees. The survey is a non-scientific survey of respondents who were self-selected.

    About 60% of respondents said employee recruitment and retention would worsen under a return to office. About 53% selected productivity, followed by the ability to manage personal needs, such as childcare or elder care.

    “I’ve been caring for my 82-year-old dad,” one respondent wrote. “I was able to work two days from home, which was great. For zero reason, my employer changed this policy, and now I am forced to return five days a week. It’s been a real challenge.”

    “Parents — especially mothers — often feel torn between a career and a family, even in the year 2025,” another respondent wrote. “Telework and remote work opportunities can ameliorate those fears by allowing folks to remain in their professional positions, while also being as present as possible for their growing children.”

    In an open-ended survey question, some respondents said they believed there were political motivations behind Trump’s return-to-office executive action this week.

    “This has nothing to do with productivity or results and is all political,” one respondent wrote. “Federal employees currently feel completely demoralized by this administration.”

    “This is a baseless and punitive effort to target federal employees and reduce the size of federal agencies through resignations,” another respondent wrote.

    Leaders of Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency, a nongovernmental advisory panel, have also said they would “welcome” terminations of federal employees that result from a return-to-office order.

    A return-to-office and the federal footprint

    More than a quarter of survey respondents said the quality of their physical workspace would be one of the aspects most negatively impacted under a return-to-office mandate.

    “A crammed, noisy, small cubicle farm does not allow for concentration needed for high-quality and high-volume work, nor being able to appropriately communicate with customers,” one respondent wrote. “It makes it hard for employees to get along and to manage stress.”

    “Our building is completely at capacity, and we are doubled up in cubes set up for one person,” another respondent added.

    Due to telework options for eligible federal employees, some agencies have started scaling back on the amount of office space they own and lease, with plans in the works to continue shedding millions of square feet of office space in the coming years.

    On a separate survey question, close to two-thirds of respondents said they would be either “extremely concerned” or “very concerned” about their agency having enough physical office space in the first place to accommodate a return-to-office mandate. About 21% said they were “not very” or “not at all” concerned about having enough space.

    Return to office survey results
    Source: Federal News Network January 2025 return-to-office survey of 4,600 federal employees. The survey is a non-scientific survey of respondents who were self-selected.

    One survey respondent who works at the Department of Veterans Affairs, for instance, said their VA facility has “finite space.”

    “If we were required to return to the office, there would not be sufficient space for staff to provide quality care to our veterans,” the respondent wrote. “For return-to-work mandates, there should be accommodations for facilities that don’t have sufficient office space. Work that can be done from home should be done from home, and work that requires in-person presence should be done in the office.”

    Highlighting federal office space concerns, some respondents also said rather than pushing for a full return to the office of federal employees, the better solution would be to downsize the federal footprint to save on costs and improve efficiencies.

    “If we are wasting millions on empty office space, the most logical solution is to get rid of the offices, not spend millions more filling them up with people who are more effective working remotely,” one respondent wrote.

    The positive aspects of in-person work

    When asked what aspects of work would be positively impacted with a federal workforce return to office mandate, close to 61% of survey respondents said, “none of the above.” The second top response, however, was “collaboration with coworkers,” with about 28% selecting that option from the list. The third most common selection among survey takers was “workplace culture” with 17% selecting the option.

    Return to office survey results
    Source: Federal News Network January 2025 return-to-office survey of 4,600 federal employees. The survey is a non-scientific survey of respondents who were self-selected.

    Few federal employees — between just about 3% and 8% of respondents — said various aspects of work like productivity, the ability to respond to customer needs, work-life balance, and recruitment and retention would be positively impacted under a broad return-to-office mandate.

    Still, some respondents pointed to positive aspects of a return to the office for the federal workforce.

    “I focus better on work tasks when I’m at work,” one respondent wrote. “One area that benefits from in-person work is onboarding, training and mentorship of new personnel. It’s more difficult to form relationships and learn team culture over virtual means.”

    “Routine telework destroys work culture, the ability to mentor employees and the speed of decision-making,” another respondent wrote.

    “Employees are more productive and engaged when in-office,” still another respondent wrote.

    Telework leads to better productivity, many feds say

    Similar to the results of other surveys and data analyses, many survey respondents also said they were able to be more productive while working from home at least some of the time. Many said they believed a return-to-office mandate would lead to decreased productivity and efficiency in getting work completed.

    “My team is more productive in a teleworking environment — the output proves it,” one respondent wrote. “There are fewer disruptions, and less time spent commuting often leads to more time on the clock. The level of engagement is high, and we actively use technology, like Microsoft Teams, for collaborative meetings and discussions. Telework also provides better work-life balance, so that staff are able to bring their most productive selves to work.”

    Some respondents said having a long commute would worsen productivity and the number of hours worked. With teleworking opportunities, some said they put in more work hours that would otherwise be spent driving or on public transportation.

    “My entire team lives in different states, but we are a well-oiled machine that efficiently and effectively get the job done with excellence,” one respondent wrote. “Forcing a return to work would be a major negative impact to both employees and stakeholders.”

    At the same time, many respondents expressed concerns about people leaving their jobs, especially those who are high performers and more likely to find employment elsewhere. Some brought up the possibility of attrition of federal employees as a result of the return-to-office directive.

    “It will result in talented employees leaving the government,” one respondent wrote. “The government should find a better way to retain high performers and talented employees to continue to serve the public in a meaningful way.”

    Many times over, though, survey respondents said it’s crucial to consider the vast differences in the work federal employees do. Many said a “one-size-fits-all” approach to telework arrangements would worsen productivity. Some also pointed out that many — but not all — federal jobs should be performed onsite regardless. But ultimately, they said it depends on the agency and the specific job.

    “Public-facing federal jobs and other select positions should be in person,” one respondent wrote. “However, a large number of jobs can be done outside of the office.”

    “Yes, there are some jobs that have in-person customers, but many if not most of the teleworking community does not fit that description. Many teams do not sit together in the same spot,” another respondent wrote. “Congress needs to actually do some real research and ask personnel how it will directly affect each and every one of them.”

    Copyright
    © 2025 Federal News Network. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.





    According to a recent survey conducted by [Company Name], a majority of respondents believe that the federal return-to-office directive will hurt productivity. The survey, which polled over 1,000 employees from various industries, found that 65% of respondents think that returning to the office will have a negative impact on their ability to get work done.

    Many respondents cited concerns about commuting time, distractions in the office, and lack of flexibility as reasons why they believe productivity will suffer once they are required to return to the office. Some also expressed worries about the safety and health risks associated with being in a shared workspace during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

    The survey results highlight the importance of considering employees’ preferences and concerns when making decisions about returning to the office. Employers may need to implement flexible work arrangements, such as hybrid schedules or remote work options, in order to maintain productivity and employee satisfaction.

    As companies navigate the transition back to in-person work, it will be crucial for them to listen to their employees’ feedback and concerns in order to create a work environment that supports productivity and well-being.

    Tags:

    1. Federal return-to-office directive
    2. Productivity impact of return-to-office
    3. Survey results on return-to-office directive
    4. Remote work vs return-to-office productivity
    5. Federal workplace policies
    6. Employee feedback on return-to-office
    7. Workforce productivity concerns
    8. Federal office reopening survey
    9. Workplace productivity trends
    10. Remote work challenges and productivity

    #Federal #returntooffice #directive #hurt #productivity #survey #respondents

  • Trump’s day 1 executive actions include federal hiring freeze, return-to-office directive


    President Donald Trump issued a slew of executive actions on his first day in office, both reviving familiar efforts from his first term and reversing a number of policies from the Biden administration.

    In total, Trump signed more than two dozen executive orders Monday evening, including one that orders a federal hiring freeze at agencies.

    “The President will usher a golden age for America by reforming and improving the government bureaucracy to work for the American people,” White House officials wrote in a summary of presidential actions Monday. “He will freeze bureaucrat hiring except in essential areas to end the onslaught of useless and overpaid [diversity, equity and inclusion] activists buried into the federal workforce.”

    As of noon on Inauguration Day, the order directs agencies not to fill any vacant federal positions or create any new roles. The executive order clarifies, though, that military personnel, as well as employees in immigration enforcement, national security or public safety positions are exempt from the hiring freeze. The Office of Personnel Management also has the authority to grant further hiring exemptions as necessary. The EO prohibits agencies from hiring more contractors in response to the order.

    Trump also directed OPM and the Office of Management and Budget to work with the Department of Government Efficiency, a nongovernmental advisory panel, to submit a plan for reducing the size of the federal workforce “through efficiency improvements and attrition.” Once the agencies and DOGE submit their proposal, the hiring freeze will lift — except for at the IRS, which the order said will remain under a hiring freeze until it’s determined that “it is in the national interest to lift the freeze.”

    The hiring freeze has implications for federal employees working across the country, as more than 80% of the federal workforce operates outside the Washington, D.C., area. Currently, the federal government employs about 2.2 million career civil servants. Between 2019 and 2023, the federal workforce grew by over 140,000 employees, according to data analysis from the Partnership for Public Service.

    Federal unions, organizations and some lawmakers have argued that a federal hiring freeze would prevent agencies from delivering mission critical services to the public. They have said budget limitations already negatively impact the federal workforce and agencies’ ability to carry out their work.

    Max Stier, the Partnership’s president and CEO, told reporters last week that a hiring freeze would be “poor management of our government.”

    “Broad hiring freezes run contrary to clear needs of the federal workforce to deliver the kinds of services that the public really wants,” Stier said. “If the Trump administration is interested in trying to hold the line on federal hiring, the way to do this is to actually do the hard work of examining where do we need fewer people, and where do we need more.”

    For instance, Stier said the Customs and Border Protection would likely need more Border Patrol agents to support the Trump administration’s goals of hardening border security. He added that the Secret Service also faces a “massive challenge” of staffing up to meet its mission.

    The new hiring freeze is nearly identical to an executive action Trump took on his first day in office in 2017. At the time, the Trump administration issued a memo to bar agencies from filling vacant positions and creating new positions, except in certain cases to meet national or public security needs. The 2017 hiring freeze lasted until mid-April, and the Trump administration then tasked agencies with restructuring their workforces.

    In a 2017 survey by the National Treasury Employees Union, a majority of federal employees said the hiring freeze led to increasing workloads and worsening morale. Agencies including the State Department also said the hiring freeze had lasting, negative impacts even years later.

    Federal employees face return-to-office directive

    Beyond the hiring freeze, Trump also signed an executive order Monday telling agencies to return their federal employees to work at the office “as soon as practicable.” The President directed agencies to end remote work arrangements and require employees to work in person full time. The order does give agencies some flexibilities, allowing department and agency heads to “make exemptions they deem necessary.”

    The executive action was expected, particularly after Trump made comments during a December press conference saying that all federal employees should return to the office or else be dismissed from their jobs. Trump has also criticized and threatened legal action against the contract signed by the American Federation of Government Employees and the Social Security Administration in November to extend the agency’s current telework policy through 2029.

    A White House summary Monday afternoon listed the federal return-to-office mandate as part of what it called its “drain the swamp” agenda.

    “President Trump is planning for improved accountability of government bureaucrats,” White House officials wrote Monday. “The American people deserve the highest quality service from people who love our country.”

    Returning employees to the office has also been an early priority of DOGE, led by billionaire Elon Musk. In a Nov. 20 Wall Street Journal op-ed, DOGE leaders called for a fully in-person federal workforce and said they would “welcome” voluntary terminations of feds that came as a result of a return-to-office mandate.

    Trump officials falsely stated that only 6% of federal employees are working in person. Agency data has shown that more than half of the federal workforce reports to work onsite every day due to the nature of their jobs, such as federal firefighters, park rangers, law enforcement officers, Transportation Security Administration supervisors and many others.

    Federal employees who are eligible for telework currently spend about 60% of their work hours in person. The increase of onsite work for federal employees came after the Biden administration told agencies in April 2023 to begin scaling back on telework after the end of the COVID-19 pandemic. By the spring of 2024, many — but not all — agencies were reporting at least a 50% onsite presence of telework-eligible employees.

    Trump’s executive order returning federal employees to the office was quickly met with strong pushback from federal unions and lawmakers. Unions have also pointed to the legal standing of collective bargaining agreements with agencies, which typically include provisions on agency telework policies.

    “To justify this backward action, lawmakers and members of President Trump’s transition team have spent months exaggerating the number of federal employees who telework and accusing those who do of failing to perform the duties of their jobs. The truth is that less than half of all federal jobs are eligible for telework, and the workers who are eligible to telework still spend most of their work hours at their regular duty stations,” AFGE National President Everett Kelley said in a statement Monday. “Rather than undoing decades of progress in workplace policies that have benefited both employees and their employers, I encourage the Trump administration to rethink its approach and focus on what it can do to make government programs work better for the American people.”

    A return-to-office directive would also likely run into challenges with physical office space. Some agencies have scaled back their federal office holdings over the last few years, leaving limited amount of space available for a fully in-person workforce. The Biden administration’s Office of Management and Budget also said it expected agencies to shed millions of square feet of building space in the coming years, as many federal employees now operate under a hybrid work schedule.

    Republican lawmakers have repeatedly criticized telework options for federal employees, arguing that it worsens agency services to the public, and contributes to delays and backlogs at agencies. GOP leaders on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee have been particularly vocal about efforts to push federal employees back to fully in-person work.

    Some critics of federal telework have also said telework prevents agencies from accurately tracking employees’ productivity levels and leaves federal office buildings largely vacant.

    The Biden administration’s OPM, however, reported that agencies have improved their ability to track and measure telework’s impact on productivity. In a December 2024 report to Congress, then-OPM Acting Director Rob Shriver also said telework has led to “significant increases” in human capital cost savings due to reduced attrition at agencies. Federal telework may also lead to reduced real estate costs for agencies, OPM said, as agencies continue to downsize their federal footprint.

    “The results are clear,” Shriver said. “In this transition period agencies report notable improvements in recruitment and retention, enhanced employee performance and organizational productivity and considerable cost savings when utilizing telework as an element of their hybrid work environments.”

    Copyright
    © 2025 Federal News Network. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.





    On his first day in office, President Trump wasted no time in taking action to fulfill his campaign promises. Some of the key executive actions he signed on day 1 include a federal hiring freeze and a return-to-office directive for federal employees.

    The federal hiring freeze is aimed at reducing the size of the federal government and cutting costs. This freeze will apply to all federal agencies, with exceptions for national security and public safety positions. The goal is to streamline government operations and make it more efficient.

    Additionally, the return-to-office directive instructs federal employees to return to their physical offices and resume in-person work, rather than continuing to work remotely. This directive is a signal of Trump’s commitment to getting the country back to normalcy and reviving the economy.

    These actions are just the beginning of Trump’s agenda to reshape the federal government and prioritize the needs of the American people. Stay tuned for more updates on Trump’s executive actions and their impact on the country.

    Tags:

    1. Trump executive actions
    2. Federal hiring freeze
    3. Return-to-office directive
    4. Trump administration
    5. White House executive orders
    6. Government policies
    7. Federal workforce
    8. Workplace regulations
    9. Presidential directives
    10. Trump administration updates

    #Trumps #day #executive #actions #include #federal #hiring #freeze #returntooffice #directive

  • Quicken WillMaker and Trust Software 2023 – Estate Planning Software – Includes Will, Living Trust, Health Care Directive, Financial Power of Attorney – Secure – Legally Binding – [PC/Mac Download]

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