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Fewer Than 10% of NYC Office Workers Expected Back This Year

2 Comments

  • staten islander
    Posted July 24, 2020 at 10:28 am

    If only 10% of office workers return to their desks in 2021 NYC has a big problem on it’s hands. The popularity of WFH (Work From Home) is making Manhattan less important than in the past. The WFH employees tend to be at the higher end of the pay scale too. What’s happening is that these higher-end employees now realize that they can do their jobs just as well from the comfort of their homes. No more subways, buses, MNRR, LIRR, NJT, etc. At least 3 people on my block are doing WFH and they love it. No more long expensive express bus ride from S.I. into Manhattan every day.

    Most executives of NYC-based corporations live in the surrounding very well-off suburbs. These decision makers now see that they can do their important work via WFH. They have also seen that they do not need as much, if any, expensive Manhattan real estate for their firm’s operations. The recent virtually unchecked looting of Soho and Macy’s, as well as endless disruptive protests show these executives that NYC is unable to provide a safe environment for their companies and employees. Those pictures of the rioting went out all over the world.

    FWIW a local contractor told me that he’s getting a lot of jobs from people building proper WFH spaces in their houses.

  • David C
    Posted July 28, 2020 at 4:09 pm

    NYC has to worry about a bigger problem in 2020 and beyond: a substantial migration of employers and jobs. With current technology, it makes no sense to have any significant operations located in NYC, or the entire Metro area for that matter, where they can be essentially shut down for months on end and disrupted and damaged by violence.

    The COVID-19 crisis and the social “unrest” have demonstrated beyond peradventure that the leaders in NYC and Albany are not fit to manage a crisis. The sheer devastation caused by the badly managed mass transit/commuter systems is apparent when you overlay that map with the outbreak map. Literally nothing was done to make that system safer for months after the crisis was declared even though essential workers often relied on it. While Gov. Cuomo seems to be on a perpetual victory lap, according to the IHME projections, NY will have double or more the mortality rate of the states like FL, GA, and TX which have been the targets of his high-handed criticism. Only the very poorly run state of NJ might nose out NY for the highest mortality rate in the US, and the world.

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