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Finally heading back to the office? It's getting more expensive to do that

A growing number ofworkers in Canada are facing a shift in their workplace arrangements, as the lifting of pandemic restrictions permits their return to the office. At the same time, they're dealing with the impact of inflation, which is making that return more expensive.

Organizations are under pressure to boost wages and supports, experts say

Office workers walk through downtown Toronto on April 4. People heading back to work are facing higher commuting costs than they used in the wake of increasing prices for food, gas and other goods and services. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Ten years ago, Nola Simon caught an unlucky break that gave her an extended previewof the future.

Back then, she was taking part in a pilot project at her workplace, which allowed participants to work from homesome of the time.

A foot injury left her unable to drive for a bit, forcingher to do all of her work at home.

"I was actually the only person in the whole company that was working [at home] five days a week," said Simon, a consultant based in Keswick, Ont., who workswith businesses on hybrid and remote work matters.

Flexible work would later become the norm for Simon, as it has for millions of Canadians during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Yet a growing number ofworkers are facing a shift in their workplacearrangements, as the lifting of pandemic restrictions permits their return to the office.

At the same time, they're dealing with the impactof inflation, which is making that return more expensive.

Sima Sajjadiani, an assistant professor in the organizational behaviour and human resources division at the University of British Columbia's Sauder School of Business, says organizations should think carefully about their plans to bring staff back to the workplace. (Submitted by Sima Sajjadiani)

Experts say employers should think carefully about what they can do to support their office-boundstaff, if they want to hang on to their services in ajob market that has a lot of people used to working more independently and seeking to keep up with the increasing cost of living.

"Organizations, more than ever, need these workers," said Sima Sajjadiani, an assistant professor in the organizational behaviour and human resourcesdivision at the University of British Columbia's Sauder School of Business.

"They should care about organizational commitment, they should care about retaining their top talent."

A gradual shift

In March, slightlymore than one-fifth of Canadian workersreported doing most of their work from home, according to Statistics Canada's latest Labour Force Survey.

That number was closer to a quarter of workers as of January.

A commuter passes through a TransLink fare gate at Waterfront station in Vancouver last week. Eddy Ng, the Smith Professor of of Equity and Inclusion in Business at Queen's University in Kingston, Ont., says many people who have been working from home on an extended basis during the pandemic aren't eager to commute to work. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Eddy Ng, the Smith Professor ofEquity andInclusion in Business at Queen's Universityin Kingston, Ont., said themigrationback to the workplace appears to be "slower than what employers had hoped for."

He sees a number of reasons for that, includingconcerns about the enduring pandemic, as well as family challenges that are more complex to deal with when working outside the home.

There's also the fact that many workers are satisfied to stick to the pandemic-era status quo.

"People are simply not eager to return to a routine that requires more effort to get to work," Ng said via email.

There are those, however, who aren't opposed to a change of scenery and a life involving a commute.

Edmonton's Ed Jay has been back at the office since last September, after a year and a half of working fromhome.

An office worker wearing a mask walks to her job in downtown Toronto earlier this month. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

The IT manager saidhe was glad to make the switch.

"There was no separation between work and home," Jay said.

Higher commuting costs

For Jay, driving to work is costing morethan it used to, but theincrease in gas prices is manageable so far.

"It's not been outrageous," said Jay, who spendsa half-hour driving to work each day.

Edmonton's Ed Jay drives about a half-hour to his job. He says that while gas prices are going up, the rise has so far been manageable for his own commuting costs. (David Bajer/CBC)

Prior to the pandemic,Aime Terrioof Hammonds Plains, N.S., used to spend twice that amount of timecommuting bothto and from Halifax.

But that was when gas cost a lot less and she wasn't paying $90 to fill up her Subaru Crosstrek, whichwas the case during a recent trip to the pumps.

Terrio said she had been concerned about what it would cost to return to work, but a change in employment has meant she'll be doing less commuting than she used to. So she now spends $20 a week to take transit on the days that she goes into the office.

"I was able to find a new job within my organization that has allowed me to work from home more days than what I had anticipated," Terrio, who now works as a training co-ordinator,saidvia email.

Back in Ontario, Nola Simon may be doing her consulting work from home, but that doesn't mean her household is shielded from the higher costs of going to work.

That's because herhusband is a contractor who has to drive to jobs.

Nola Simon of Keswick, Ont., north of Toronto, consults with businesses about hybrid- and remote-work issues. (Submitted by Nola Simon)

Simon said she believes this broader impact of inflation on households is beingmissed in the conversation about the shift back to the workplace.

"It's not just the individual who happens to work for the company who's returning to [the] office," she said.

"Employers have to consider that there's an impact to the household budget, and employees are going to make decisions about what's actually going to work best for the whole family."

Queen's University's Eddy Ng said employers are under pressure to help employeesaddress these concerns.

This includes demands forsupport for"daycare, transport or shuttle services, meals, added 'cost of working' compensation," hesaid, in addition to ensuring that workers have a safe workplace to return to.

Keeping workers happy

In Canada's most-populous province, the view from the top of the Labour Ministry is that organizationsneed to do more to ensure their employeesare satisfied with their working arrangements and compensation.

"To attract the best workers, businesses need to be prepared to offer bigger salaries and consider perks (like working from home) to retain them," Ontario Labour Minister Monte McNaughton told CBC News in an emailed statement.

Ontario Labour Minister Monte McNaughton, shown at a news conference in Toronto last year, says businesses must be prepared to boost salaries and consider offering perks to employees in order to attract the best talent. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

Ahead of an election in June, the incumbent Progressive Conservative government in Ontario has been highlighting efforts to improve conditions for workers.

UBC's Sima Sajjadiani said it's clear that many businesses are in a position to pay their workers more and it is in their interest to do so.

"They can increase the compensation, and in return they are going to save the cost of replacing people who are leaving," she said.

"They will improve the well-being of their employees, they will improve their organizational commitment and all the benefits that comes with [that]."