• Bonehead
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    611 year ago

    When I worked for Bell, they had just ended their WFH policy. I was required to be in the office every day. The rest of my team was still under the policy according to their contract, including my boss who was a 10 minute walk from the office, so they all worked from home. And most of my meetings involved teams in 3 different cities, not to mention the fact that it was Bell, so all meetings were over the phone with a screen sharing app. There were some other people that worked in the office, but they worked with different teams so I didn’t interact with them beyond saying “hi” in the break room as I was getting coffee. But it was apparently very important that I be in the office.

    Some days I really appreciate the fact that I left IT.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      Could also be laying off people without doing “layoffs”. Not everybody is going to return to the office, problem solved.

      • Bonehead
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        81 year ago

        Got laid off from Bell and couldn’t find another IT job before EI ran out, so I applied to be a mail carrier. Been doing that ever since. I did apply to a few IT jobs after I started doing mail, but it wasn’t long that I realized I could make more where I was and I really didn’t miss It all that much. It’s a little frustrating when I hit bugs in the software we use, because I could write the bug report in full detail but I have no access to submit it. But then I get done at 1pm on a Friday and I remember why I left that world.

        • fadingembers
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          31 year ago

          Thank you for sharing! I’m glad you’re much happier in your current position. I feel that about knowing you could fix things if you had the access