This file photo shows Google's headquarters in Mountain View, California. (PHOTO / AP)
Major US companies are recalling employees to the office a year after the coronavirus pandemic forced millions of them to work from home.
Microsoft, Google, Walmart and others will adopt a hybrid model combining work from home with work in the office.
Microsoft said last week it would begin allowing more workers back into its headquarters in Redmond, Washington, starting on Monday.
"As some employees return to our global work sites and others prefer or need to work remotely, we are finding additional ways of putting our hybrid workplace into practice," Kurt DelBene, an executive vice-president at Microsoft, wrote on the company's blog.
"At each of our global work sites, the hybrid workplace model strikes a balance, providing limited additional services on campus for those who choose to return, while supporting those who need to work remotely or feel more comfortable doing so."
In step four of its six-step plan, the Redmond campus will allow 57,000 nonessential workers to work from home, the office or both. The company has approximately 160,000 employees. Microsoft will continue to require employees to wear masks and maintain social distancing.
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Google is also taking a hybrid approach in getting people back to the office. It is testing out a flexible workweek.
It also announced plans to hire 10,000 people this year for post-pandemic business. They will be added to offices in Atlanta, Washington DC, Chicago and New York. The company said it will build new offices in Minnesota, Texas and North Carolina.
Google's parent Alphabet will invest US$7 billion this year to expand its offices and data centers in the US. At least US$1 billion will be spent in California.
The Partnership for New York City said as of early March, only 10 percent of the city's 1 million office workers were in offices. The business group said it expects nearly half of them to return to the office by September.
In what is seen as a move that may compel more private businesses in the city to bring their employees back to work, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced last week that 80,000 municipal office employees, including caseworkers, computer specialists and clerical staff, must return to work in phases starting May 3.
Masks encouraged
The city said that vaccinations won't be mandatory for those returning. The wearing of face masks will be encouraged but will not also be mandatory.
"We're going to make it safe, but we need our city workers back in their offices where they can do the most to help their fellow New Yorkers," de Blasio said. "And it's also going to send a powerful message about this city moving forward."
In the city's financial sector, JPMorgan Chase will require summer interns to work in its Manhattan offices. Investment bank Morgan Stanley announced last week it plans a full return to its Midtown headquarters, though some employees may work remotely from time to time.
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In Manhattan, the amount of sublet office space that became available in 2020 was 50 percent. It is now 27 percent of all space, according to Savills, the real estate firm.
In the retail sector, Target is making remote work a part of its future. It will reduce a third of its work space at its headquarters in Minneapolis.
Walmart, the country's largest private employer, said it will expand its headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas, and allow workers on its technology team to work remotely indefinitely.
belindarobinson@chinadailyusa.com