U.S. spending bill encourages telecommuting

By Alorie Gilbert
http://news.com.com/U.S.+spending+bill+encourages+telecommuting/2100-1014_3-
5473658.html

Story last modified Wed Dec 01 16:50:00 PST 2004

The evening commute in the Washington area may soon be a little less hectic,
thanks to a small provision embedded in the government's giant 2005 spending
bill.

The provision, authored by Rep. Frank Wolf (R-Va.), requires several major
federal agencies, including the Commerce, Justice and State Departments, to
permit their employees to work from home or "telework." If they don't, the
agencies could lose a $5 million slice of their budgets.

"With all the advances in technology today, there is just no reason to strap
yourself in a metal box every morning only to drive to an office where you
sit in front of a computer all day," Wolf said in the statement.

Congress approved the temporary $388 billion 2005 Omnibus Appropriations
Bill, which is subject to revision, on Nov. 20.
Digital agenda

The provision also withholds $5 million from the budgets of the Small
Business Administration and the Securities and Exchange Commission until
each expands its telecommuting policy to include all eligible workers.

In addition, the bill requires the departments to report the number of
workers who telecommute to the Appropriations Committee on a quarterly basis
and designate a "telework coordinator."

Just 6 percent of 1.7 million federal employees work from home at least once
a week, according a recent survey of 74 agencies by the Office of Personnel
Management.

"The benefits of teleworking far outweigh any potential downside that
managers attempt to cite," Wolf said in his statement. "Survey after survey
show that telecommuters are extremely productive. Telecommuters have higher
morale, have less stress from fighting traffic every day and take fewer sick
days."

One survey, reported on this week by the BBC, concluded that commuting ranks
right up there with working as a fighter pilot or riot police officer in
terms of stress.

The House of Representatives is scheduled to vote on a revised version of
the 3,000-page spending bill on Monday.




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