Philadelphia city workers are back at the office, and it's transforming family life (2024)

MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:

Return-to-office policies are getting stricter, upending the lives of those who had gotten used to working from home. In a survey of CEOs last year, two-thirds predicted a full return to the office by 2026. In some places, this is already happening. NPR's Andrea Hsu checked in on one family struggling with their new reality in a city that has called all its workers back.

ANDREA HSU, BYLINE: When Cherelle Parker was running to be mayor of Philadelphia, she promised the city a more visible and accessible government.

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CHERELLE PARKER: A city government that our residents can see, touch and feel.

HSU: Well, this summer she made good on that promise by ordering all city employees back to the office five days a week, starting July 15. For several thousand city workers, it was farewell to hybrid work...

(SOUNDBITE OF CARD READER BEEPING)

HSU: ...And hello again to the daily commute.

ANDREW DIDONATO: Oh, great. There's already delays on the train.

HSU: I meet Andrew DiDonato after work at the train station in Center City, Philadelphia. His round trip time in transit...

DIDONATO: Ninety minutes to two hours, depending.

HSU: Which was OK when it was only two days a week. But now, especially when the train's 20 minutes late...

UNIDENTIFIED PERSON: Boarding for track four.

HSU: ...It wears on him. DiDonato works for the city's licenses and inspections department. He's been there seven years. He's the guy who reviews your permit application if you're building or renovating a home. He lives in his childhood home in Northeast Philly with his wife and three kids.

MASSIMO: I'm the genius of gymnastics.

HSU: That's Massimo (ph). He's 6. There's also 10-year-old Rosalie (ph) and 9-year-old Lily (ph).

LILY: Dad.

DIDONATO: Hi, Lily. Oh.

LILY: I haven't seen you all day.

DIDONATO: I know you haven't seen me all day.

HSU: The kids miss him now that he is gone all day. Of course, this used to be the norm. Before the pandemic, DiDonato says, remote work was something people joked about.

DIDONATO: People talked about it like the pipe dream of flying cars.

HSU: Coincidentally, just days before COVID shut down the city in March of 2020, his department rolled out a new online permitting system that had been in the works for years.

DIDONATO: Within months, everybody was using it.

HSU: So much so that even with in-person appointments back, far fewer people come in. DiDonato quickly found he could do his job - reviewing permit applications - just fine from home three days a week. What he discovered he was doing better was parenting. It was a revelation. No longer was he out of the house before the kids were up. His wife, Ashley (ph), who'd stayed home since their son was born, got a part-time job working early mornings at a fitness center.

ASHLEY: It was one of those moments where something perfect falls in your lap. It was exactly what I needed when I needed.

HSU: And now Dad got the kids up, fed them breakfast, talked about the day ahead.

DIDONATO: All those extra conversations I get to have with my kids during those little moments that I was gone for.

HSU: And at the end of the workday, he was immediately available to help with homework and afterschool clubs. His oldest, Rosalie, joined the school play, and Dad got a role, too.

ROSALIE: He built the boat.

DIDONATO: The play was...

ASHLEY: The "Moana"...

DIDONATO: ..."Moana Junior."

ASHLEY: Yeah, the "Moana" boat.

DIDONATO: So I built Moana's boat.

ROSALIE: And it was, like, a real-life size.

ASHLEY: It was. It was huge.

HSU: Over time, they all got used to this life.

DIDONATO: It wasn't something we had for a couple weeks or a couple months. It was four years.

HSU: And now it's gone. With DiDonato in the office full time, Ashley has had to cut back her hours and pick up a weekend shift.

ASHLEY: We're forced into these systems that are no longer working for us. It feels like it's taking a step backwards.

HSU: Workers all across America may share this view, but increasingly, they're butting up against a different philosophy - that for workplaces to thrive, you can't just have part of the workforce show up on any given day. In Philadelphia, Mayor Parker has cited the many thousands of city employees who never worked from home - social workers, sanitation workers, the water department. She says she wants the city's return-to-office plan to be a model for others in Center City.

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PARKER: In efforts to make a more vibrant Philadelphia, that's the ultimate goal.

HSU: So Andrew DiDonato is at a crossroads. He likes his job. It comes with some pretty great benefits - health care, a free train pass and a city pension to look forward to. But is all that worth the key family time he's giving up?

DIDONATO: It's one of those things where you can't put the toothpaste back in the tube.

HSU: After living the hybrid life for four years, he's not sure he can go without. Andrea Hsu, NPR News, Philadelphia. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Philadelphia city workers are back at the office, and it's transforming family life (2024)
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