President Joe Biden's administration is set to take a more forceful approach to ending remote work in the coming months, asking federal workers to return to physical offices by the fall. According to a new report by Axios, citing an email sent from Biden's chief of staff Jeff Zients to cabinet members, Zients said that federal workers would aim to return to in-person work between September and October.
Main Idea: President Joe Biden’s administration is pushing federal workers to return to in-person office work by the fall.
Key Points:
Federal workers may face longer commutes and less flexibility, while taxpayers could see higher office costs if agencies keep underused buildings open.
In-person work may improve some public services and speed up agency response times for households and small businesses.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Central political actor whose administration’s push to end remote work is the main subject of the article.
Biden’s chief of staff, named as the official pushing cabinet members to execute the return-to-office shift.
Named office associated with the email directing cabinet members to accelerate the return to in-person work.
Cited for its report on federal building capacity, providing significant background for the article.
Former New York City mayor quoted supporting the broader push and criticizing remote work’s effects.
One of the federal agencies implicated in the broader return-to-office push, though not a central actor.
Federal body mentioned as part of the government workplace context and office space use discussion.
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Sign in to commentThe location of the federal office-space problem discussed, but not acting as an entity in the story.