FROLITICKS

Satirical commentary on Canadian and American current political issues

Are Emerging Office Designs Really Enough To Encourage Return to Workplaces?

Recently, the New York Times published articles about what the writers referred to as the new “Envy Offices”.  The U.S. Green Building Council in recent years espoused the benefits of green buildings, including environment, economic and health and community benefits.  In other studies, various office designers declared that open-plan spaces are actually lousy for workers.  Nevertheless, in the last couple of decades, employers across industries embraced creative open floor plan offices as a way to convey their culture and attract fresh talent.  However, among employees, especially introverts, open office concepts became an increasing source of frustration as the lack of privacy, noise and other distractions made it harder for workers to concentrate.

For those of us who worked in offices where the use of cubicles was common place, the biggest issue tended to be related to poor “air quality” due to inadequate ventilation systems and the resulting volatile organic compounds captured in enclosed buildings.  Such buildings constructed during the seventies and eighties were fully enclosed and pressurized due to the focus on “energy conservation” and associated costs at the time.  As a result, it became clear that such buildings have a higher percentage of workers reporting symptoms such as irritated eyes, nose and throat, fatigue, headache and respiratory symptoms.  In 2007, a U.S. survey found that one quarter of office workers perceived indoor air-quality problems in their offices, and about 20 percent reported their work performance was hampered by air quality.  Experts suspected those figures were conservative, and I fully agree.  Employing modular office furniture, space usage was given a priority whereby a maximum number of workers were squeezed into cubicles, again further reducing air quality.  The use of cubicles also reminded people of their place in the power structure, with higher-ups typically allocated more space and enclosed offices.  People would even tussle over having a cubicle near a window, especially given bad, glare producing and predominately fluorescent lighting found in many buildings.  However, with cubicle walls one at least had the perception that one had some privacy.

Subsequent to the pandemic, all that has changed.  With more employees working remotely from home and the arrival of “hybrid working arrangements” requiring workers to be in the office a specified number of days each week, employers are having to reconsider office designs.  Open office concepts may actually offer a better alternative under current circumstances given a more itinerate workforce and the need to reduce required costly work space and associated expenditures to the employer.  Mobile technologies have greatly facilitated the use of new office designs, which did not readily exist two or three decades ago and initially were very costly.

Historically, the evolution in office designs has been governed by many different considerations over the years, most related to the perceived needs of organizational hierarchies and their priorities.  This often meant that worker needs and the impact on their health and safety were often overlooked.  Studies have shown that poor office building design and poor air quality leads to poorer productivity.  For this reason, it will be interesting to see what office designers have in store for workers in the coming years.

Hopefully, employers and office building designers can learn from their past mistakes and experiences.  Today’s younger workers may not be so forgiving.  With skilled labour shortages across North America, recruitment and retention issues are even more significant.  The first thing that a potential employee will see is the building and its interior workplace design.  With more prevalent remote working arrangements available, making the office more inviting, healthy and aesthetic has become even more important.  This will help determine how one views work and one’s relationship to it.  Think about it, when it comes to today’s workplace, where and how would you want to work?

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U.S. Cover-up of India’s Assassination Attempt of Sikh American Citizen

Why is it that we are just now learning that U.S. authorities thwarted a conspiracy to assassinate a self-proclaimed Sikh separatist on American soil?  Apparently, in his most recent discussions with India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi, President Biden issued a warning to India’s PM over concerns that India’s government was involved in the alleged plot.  It appears that the target of the plot was Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, an American and Canadian citizen who is general counsel for Sikhs for Justice, a U.S.-based group that is part of a movement pushing for an independent Sikh state called “Khalistan”.  Making matters worst, the Indian nationals suspected in carrying out the plot have supposedly fled the U.S.

The alleged plot follows the murder of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a Canadian Sikh separatist killed in Vancouver in June of this year.  In September, Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said there were “credible allegations” linking New Delhi to Nijjar’s fatal shooting.  According to the Financial Times, separate from the above noted diplomatic warning, U.S. federal prosecutors have since also since filed a sealed indictment in a New York district court against at least one alleged perpetrator of the plot.  According to the Times, the U.S. Justice Department is debating whether to unseal the indictment and make the allegations public or wait until Canada finishes its investigation into Nijjar’s murder.  The U.S. Justice Department and FBI declined to comment.

Now, given this recent allegation, it is surprising that no one has yet been arrested by American authorities.  After all, this would have been a case involving a “conspiracy to commit a crime” on U.S. soil.  Even though the assassination was prevented somehow, there is nevertheless the possibility of charges being laid in light of the intent to commit a crime.  In the case of Nijjar’s murder, Washington urged India to help in the Canadian investigation, but avoided being too critical of New Delhi in public.  The question now for the U.S. government is why they haven’t been more forthcoming with information about the plot and its confidential warnings to the Indian authorities, unlike the full public disclosure of the Canadian Prime Minister?

Any threat to an American or Canadian citizen on American or Canadian soil is a direct and serious challenge to our sovereignty.  What we are seeing in the Pannun case is an attempt by the American authorities to cover-up the plot for political reasons.  They do not want to upset the Indian government which, as a member of the Quad security group along with Japan and Australia, is a viewed as a critical part of a broader strategy to counter China.  However, what would have happened if the assassination plot had been successful on American soil?  This may have been a different story!

What the situation does highlight is the fact that the current Indian regime is willing to sponsor attempts at murdering any active members of the Sikh separatist movement living abroad.  Sounds familiar to what Putin is doing with respect to Russians living abroad whom he deems to be challenging his rule.  European countries, most notably the United Kingdom, have publicly and without hesitancy condemned such Russian criminal activities and placed those involved on their most wanted lists.

The Pannun case demonstrates that the alleged plot involving the murder of Hardeep Singh Nijjar in Canada was not an isolated incident.  If proven, India should be held accountable for its actions, and those responsible should be brought to justice in Canada or the U.S.  The question now is whether the Indian government will willingly agree to participating in the respective investigations surrounding these two incidents?  Both the Canadian and American authorities must continue to pressure India to do so, and to provide whatever information they may have.  Given the attitude of current regime of India’s Prime Minister Modi, this may be easier said than done.

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Issues Surrounding Remote Working From Home Continue To Surface

Back at the start of the 2000s, telework or remote work was in its infancy.  One American 2010 report about telework within the federal government noted that only 8.67 percent of the total eligible federal workforce teleworked in 2008.  In 2010, legislation was signed by President Obama that requires federal agencies to develop policies that allow eligible employees to work remotely and to include telecommuting options in emergency contingency plans. Several government positions — including law enforcement officers, park rangers, lab technicians, medical doctors and nurses — are exempt because of the nature of the jobs.  By 2011, a report by the U.S. Office of Personnel Management indicated that 32 percent of federal employees were teleworking. 

A 2020 study by Statistics Canada noted that approximately 4 in 10 (39%) Canadian workers are in jobs that can plausibly be carried out from home.  The corresponding estimate for the United States is 37%.  Then came the pandemic which further accelerated the move to telework or so-called hybrid work where employees are required to come to the workplace a certain number of days each week.  Physical distancing measures to stop the spread of COVID-19 resulted in a large number of Canadians and Americans working from home, many for the first time.  This sudden transition in how the economy is operating raises questions about how many jobs can reasonably be performed from home.

While governments led the way during the pandemic, private sector corporations also needed to examine their alternative working arrangements, leading as well to a significant increase in telework and hybrid work weeks.  Subsequently, there have been further studies about the impact on productivity, office space and physical location costs, employee morale, work-life balance, attrition rates, commuting times, etc., etc.  More recent studies this past year have found that remote work and hybrid work arrangements appear not to have any detrimental impact on productivity, and in some cases may actually increase productivity.  In certain cases, employers preferred the hybrid model as a means to ensuring the orientation of new employees, mentoring opportunities and simply facilitating interaction between employees and supervisors in the workplace.  In today’s tight labour force environment, some employers have promoted the possibility of remote work and hybrid arrangements as a means to attract and retain workers.

However, the growth of these alternative arrangements, which are here to stay, has resulted in major impacts on urban centers where many employers are located, especially in the downtown core.  Businesses that serviced employees while at work have seen significant declines in demand for their services in the core.  Public transit in some communities has also seen significant declines in ridership, as fewer people are commuting to work.  Those who decided to live outside the core because it was less costly in terms of housing will more than likely prefer to continue their alternative work arrangements.  Female employees in particular have been affected as they tend to work in jobs where telework can be accommodated.

All in all, there has been a major impact on the world of modern work which both the public and private sectors will have to adjust to.  What this means for the workforce has to still be further studied.  There is little doubt that employers will be experimenting with various ways in which to better accommodate their needs and those of there employees.  With the current shortages of skilled labour in both countries, they will have little choice but to adapt.

Reducing overheads, improving customer satisfaction, increasing productivity and staff retention are the core business benefits that stem from alternative working arrangements such as telework.  Furthermore, governments and firms are also starting to recognise that their environmental responsibilities can also be better addressed, with teleworking helping to decrease the ever burgeoning congestion problems and cut carbon emissions.  Everyone is affected, whether you’re an employer, employee, customer or community leader.  Remote working is here to stay in one form or another.

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Environmental Groups Cut Programs as Funding Shifts to Climate Change

When it comes to non-profit environmental groups, many of us are familiar with Greenpeace because of its activist actions from time to time which capture the attention of mainstream media and the authorities.  However, in both Canada and the U.S., there are numerous other lesser known groups that have concentrated on more specific environmental issues.  For example, in the U.S. you have such groups as the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), The Sierra Club, Defenders of Wildlife, the Environmental Working Group, the ClimateWorks Foundation and the Union of Concerned Scientists.  For a long time, such groups focused on particular environmental issues such as nuclear power safety, environmental toxins, and nearly extinct wildlife or threatened species in North America.  However, in recent years there has been a significant shift in donor contributions to nonprofits fighting climate change, leaving some of the both nations’ biggest environmental organizations facing critical budgetary shortfalls in existing programs.

According to a survey released in September by the Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy, global spending to fight climate change by environmental groups and other nonprofits reached $8 billion (U.S.) in 2021, most of it in the U.S. and Canada.  Reportedly, leaders of some legacy environmental groups now largely agree that climate change, given its wide range of increasing global effects, is the top priority.  Since these organizations depend extensively on funding contributions from different sources, including from some of the world’s richest individuals, they have had to realign their goals to reflect policies and practices designed to tackle specific concerns around climate change.  This also means increasing support for government and industry initiatives promoting green technologies, including those related to solar, wind and thermo energy projects.  Even nuclear energy appears to be making a comeback as an additional means to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.  For example, the NRDC is eliminating its longstanding program promoting nuclear safety and cleanup as its donors focus on the climate crisis.

Facing unsustainable budget deficits, some of the largest non-profit environmental organizations are being forced to announce layoffs among their staffs.  This will result in the lost of a good deal of environmental expertise and program support for some time to come.  In addition, younger donors now tend to increasingly support those initiatives targeting climate change.  After all, younger people really view that climate change is the most immediate challenge affecting their lives in so many ways. 

The shift in priorities is also reflected in government policy, with climate change winning the lion’s share of some agencies’ budget increases. The number one strategic goal among declared priorities in the U.S. Environment Protection Agency’s list of seven priorities in its five-year strategic plan is to tackle the “Climate Crisis”.  The use of the term “crisis” is an important recognition of our need to focus on climate change sooner rather than later.  Interestingly in Canada, formally known as Environment Canada, the department’s name was recently changed to Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC).  ECCC is the now the department of the Government of Canada responsible for coordinating environmental policies and programs, as well as preserving and enhancing the natural environment and renewable resources.

Environmental groups, like governments, have no choice but to adapt their policies aimed at tackling the consequences of climate change, both short-term and long-term.  There is only so much donor funding available in both countries, and failure to adapt could result in their eventual demise.  Somehow, marketing of existing programs and policies have to be reoriented to tie into climate change issues in some way.  No organization is immune from the current shifts in peoples’ priorities in the environmental field.  Unfortunately, failure to effectively adapt could eventually mean their very extinction.

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What Is The Value Of Teaching “Humanities” In Our Universities?

For the last two decades there has been a lot written about the value of a post-secondary degree in the “humanities”.  Now, the debate has once again risen in the U.S. and Canada as a number of universities, facing budgetary declines, appear to have taken steps of cutting back or even eliminating certain humanities programs.  Part of the reason is that students increasingly are fleeing to majors more closely aligned to employment, with degrees in business and commerce being the most popular.  Let’s face it, most universities love to market career oriented disciplines.  The humanities on the other hand normally covers such programs as French, Spanish and German, American or Canadian studies, art history, classical studies, philosophy and religious studies.  In the past, such disciplines had been the bread and butter for so-called “liberal arts” colleges.

There have been plenty of arguments given for maintaining humanities programs, particularly when it comes to their ability to evoke critical thinking.  Some would argue that if you want simply to work towards a career, go to MIT or a community college specializing in employment-oriented foundations.  Camille Paglia, a social critic and professor of Humanities and Media Studies at University of the Arts in Philadelphia, was quoted in 2010 as to the value of the contemporary social science course.  Paglia argued at the time that the current trend toward hyper-focused humanities courses (Women’s Studies, African-American Studies, etc.) has eroded the overall purpose of higher education, which she noted is to provide a “broad overview and foundation for overall learning.”

In addition, it’s no secret that most universities tend to lean left, especially when it comes to teaching the humanities and social sciences.  For this reason, there has been a backlash against any form of suspected “ideology” driven teaching.  Such concerns of course don’t normally exist among business and law faculties, considered as safe havens from “leftist” ideologies as they tend to stress support for the “status quo”. 

There is little doubt that in today’s economy and labour market, students are increasingly considering more career-oriented programs in both Canada and the U.S.  After all, the high cost incurred toward certain degrees is perceived as eventually leading to good-paying jobs. Two decades ago, scholars were still confident that the availability of liberal arts would still be there in the future.  Now there are those who believe that the liberal arts, once fairly robust, are seeing a more imminent decline.  The situation certainly leads one to question the role of universities as institutions of higher learning and preserving our society’s historical, cultural and linguistic attributes.

In studying the humanities, one is given an opportunity to reflect on the evolution of a society and where it may or may not be going.  There is a real need to question so many aspects of modern society as it has evolved.  For this reason, the sheer joy of learning has to be instilled in tomorrow’s leaders, keeping an open mind to all the possibilities.  One key is the ability to quickly react to changing times and to be flexible in accepting the possibility of multiple answers and thinking outside the box.  Governments and corporations need to have people equipped in critical thinking so as to provide different ways of thinking about the issues of the day, be they related to climate change or social-economic policies.  It also helps to know how we got here!

Where are the writers and thinkers of the future coming from, if not from universities and the humanities?  Can we really simply leave our future to the engineers, programmers, lawyers and business leaders?  Back in 2010, University of Chicago philosopher Martha Nussbaum released her book Not for profit: Why Democracy needs the Humanities.  I would suggest that anyone interested in this issue take the time to read her book, especially since our democracies appear to be constantly under attack by oligarchs and promoters of authoritarian rule. 

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