Up to 27,000 federal public servants miss deadline to affirm they are COVID vaccinated

There are many reasons not to be back in the office. Many offices are reporting that productivity has remained roughly the same with their staff working remotely, or in some cases even increased. To the extent that some offices are now 100% work from home, and they probably wouldn't be doing that if they were having trouble getting any work done.

And then you also have added benefits of reducing commute time, reducing emissions from cars, etc.

Obviously some people prefer working "in the office", and some people find they're more productive in the office. But I haven't heard any excuse or justification for getting everyone back in the office.

/r/ottawa Thread Parent Link - nationalpost.com