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The Media

New York Times' Lunchbox Perk Backfires Amid Work-From-Home Protest (bloomberg.com) 81

Hundreds of New York Times employees are working from home this week in defiance of the company's renewed return-to-office push. Bloomberg News: More than 1,200 people, who are the majority of the journalists and tech workers represented by the NewsGuild of New York, pledged not to return to the office Monday in an effort to get the Times to negotiate over RTO plans, according to the union. "Health and safety policies are a part of contract negotiations and they have to be bargained over," Times software engineer Carrie Price said in an interview Monday. "Being in charge of our own personal risk assessment is important to our membership... Being asked to give up that ability to be in control of my own personal safety for myself and my loved ones, is something that we don't want and it hasn't been negotiated over." The journalists have been without a contract since March 2021 and staff haven't gotten raises in more than two years despite decades-high inflation and rent increases. Meanwhile, they say the company has done exceptionally well in recent years and executives are making millions of dollars each year. [...] On Monday, the Times offered branded lunchboxes to welcome employees back to the office.
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New York Times' Lunchbox Perk Backfires Amid Work-From-Home Protest

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  • aim higher like free catered lunch not just an box and not even an boxed lunched.

    • In the old days, large companies had cafeterias with hot lunches. I guess someone realised shutting these down lined the shareholder's pockets a little more.

      • by larwe ( 858929 )
        Those perks have gotten complex. In some areas they are taxable. Worse, in some areas (looking at California, of course) on-campus cafeterias have been banned because they take away from the tax base / employment statistics for restaurants surrounding the campus.
        • by thomn8r ( 635504 )

          Worse, in some areas (looking at California, of course) on-campus cafeterias have been banned because they take away from the tax base / employment statistics for restaurants surrounding the campus.

          Citation? I've worked at a couple of California companies with on-campus cafeterias.

            • by PCM2 ( 4486 )

              You're reading that "banned" headline as if some government told them they couldn't have a cafeteria. That's not the case. It is true, though, that when one of these big tech companies moves into town and all their employees eat free lunches in a cafeteria, the local businesses all suffer.

    • Catered lunches actually benefit corporations. Employees are more likely to have meetings with coworkers during lunch or eat at their desks. It doesn't really matter how much their per-hour rate is, employers almost always realize much higher profits per-hour of labor input from each employee and lower wage employees are oftentimes generating the bulk of the profits. But, assuming zero profits 1200 employees taking 15 minute shorter lunch breaks by $15/hr (minimum wage in NYC) would equate to $1134000 of fr
      • by Zak3056 ( 69287 )

        Catered lunches actually benefit corporations [...] But, assuming zero profits 1200 employees taking 15 minute shorter lunch breaks by $15/hr (minimum wage in NYC) would equate to $1134000 of free extra labor per year.

        If it only cost you five bucks to feed each one of those employees, it would cost you $1,512,000, which is almost $400k more than the cost you calculated for that "free" labor. Seems less of a "predatory act by company" and more of a "win-win where both employer and employee benefit" to me.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @03:10PM (#62882171)
    Than people's lives. News at 11:00.

    Ignoring the fact that evidence that work from home affects productivity is sketchy at best I'm constantly running into problems with people out sick for weeks on end or obviously struggling with covid while working. The productivity hit from people being constantly sick is way more than what a little water cooler talk gets you.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      > people out sick for weeks on end or obviously struggling with covid while working

      Vaccine side effects :)

    • by AmazingRuss ( 555076 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @03:20PM (#62882223)
      Have been sick ONCE in the last 2 years. Was coughing 8 months out of the year when I went into the office. It was like a giant infection chamber.
      • And knock on wood but I haven't had to use it. I used to go through at least one sometimes two of them a year (the plastic ones don't last). It's weird going this long without a nasal infection caused by a massive stuffed up nose which in turn is caused by a cold I picked up at work
    • Oh working from home affects productivity a lot. Now that you can actually continue working during meetings where some narcissist who loves hearing himself talk drones on instead of sitting there mentally undressing the intern while pretending to listen to the bozo, productivity sure took off to new heights.

    • by JediTrainer ( 314273 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @03:40PM (#62882287)
      Ignoring the fact that evidence that work from home affects productivity is sketchy at best

      Guess I'm lucky to be where I work. The owner of the company stated that our productivity -increased- with work from home. The idea that they're running with is that occasional connections with your coworkers and getting out of the house can be healthy for your mental state, but they have no intentions of forcing it but rather encourage periodic get-togethers instead. I'd say that's a very good compromise.
      • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

        Periodic social get togethers are much better for getting to know people than forcing people to sit next to each other every day while they're busy working.
        We do the same, every few months we'll rent a meeting space like a hotel and get everyone together for a couple of days. It's usually a few hours of presentations, possibly some leisure activities and the rest of the time just socialising with colleagues.

        When i was forced to commute to an office every day, i was constantly tired or sick and found most of

        • by Steve B ( 42864 )

          This. I keep hearing airy pronoucements about the importance of "corporate culture" and "collaboration" and whatnot, but in reality the conversations I heard back in the days when I commuted to the office consisted almost entirely of 1)gossip that would make a high school mean-girl clique look like Plato's Symposium, 2)placing and settling of sports pool bets, and 3)random content-free small talk.

    • by CAIMLAS ( 41445 )

      Almost everywhere I've heard of has seen massive increases in work productivity during covid precisely due to WFH.

      The exceptions, are meatspace-only type work, like traditional sales and perhaps marketing.

      Personally, having been WFH since 2011, I can't recommend it enough. I'm able to get twice as much work done at home as in the office in a given day. So much bullshit routine things are simply eliminated, and there is no "I'll go for a quick walk for the third time today, because I can't concentrate due to

    • Let's be honest, EVERYTHING is more important than people's lives to the corporate masters. Health? Fuck that. Sanity? Nope. Family? Fuck your family away if it gets in the way of profits or the CEO getting a new leer or yacht or fifth home this year.

      At some point it'd be nice to see a return to semi-sanity for our overall outlook on life, but I think we're so locked in on profit as religion that it just can't happen without something major going down. Basically, until we show them that killing us isn't pro

      • by Steve B ( 42864 )

        the CEO getting a new leer

        Good point; habitual sexual harassers are in favor of RTO for obvious reasons.

    • Suit people: Quit yer bullshit.

      In New Reality, bullshit quits the suits. Bye-ee!

      (seriously. Where I"m at it's been a mutiny, quite bloody, and for now the suits seem to have lost. But where I am is far.. far from typical suit mentality like a NYC staid, boring old company like NYT)

    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      True. AI is almost good enough to write basic propaganda of the kind that majority of NYT content is nowadays. It already does a lot of tangential work in writing it, in addition to writing some of the simpler collation stories.

      • by CAIMLAS ( 41445 )

        AI has a better-than-5th-grade writing level, however. So humans have that going for them.

  • by TigerPlish ( 174064 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @03:15PM (#62882197)

    ...and if i wanted a branded metal lunchbox, it'd have to be an OG Star Wars one from 1977.

    Nothing else will do. Besides, the best lunchboxes are them soft-sided insulated thingies. No one totes a lunch pail anymore..

    Well, maybe a bento box would do. Esp. if from a good Japanese joint.

    But nah.. swag just doesn't sway anymore. Hasn't, not for a while.

  • by dotandslash ( 8298694 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @03:22PM (#62882225)

    "Being in charge of our own personal risk assessment is important to our membership"

    I seem to remember a number of people using this argument to avoid using an experimental drug just a year ago and being fired for it.

    • by CAIMLAS ( 41445 )

      Didn't you hear? The administration says those are unpeople, we can't talk about them. They're terrorists.

    • "Being in charge of our own personal risk assessment is important to our membership"

      I seem to remember a number of people using this argument to avoid using an experimental drug just a year ago and being fired for it.

      Yeah, at will employment states sure can backfire.

  • "Branded lunch boxes"?

    Really?

    Be honest, suits, would you take this serious? No? Then why do you think anyone who actually works is that stupid when even you are smarter than that?

  • by Malays2 bowman ( 6656916 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @03:29PM (#62882263)

    Should I go with my personal saftey and control over my own life, or should I go with the neat-o branded lunchbox?

  • I guess the NYT missed the news that branded lunchboxes pretty much lose all their cool by the time you get to the 5th grade.

  • Maybe they should learn to code so they can find a real job.

  • There are plenty of job openings out there. The company should negotiate and simply give every employee a decision: work like you are paid to work or take a pay cut to stay at home since you don't have travel expense to and from work.
  • ...licking the boots of your corporate masters.

    Lol.....Land of the "Free".

    Assholes only want you back in the office for two reasons:

    1: Useless management wants to actually see their slaves
    2: The US ruling class is getting leaned on by the building owners.

    One silver lining of Covid was it clearly demonstrated WFH works, and can work well for all sorts of people. Now they want to wind that back.

    I manage a team of 10 cyber security architect and I do not give a flying fuck where thry are as long as the work ge

    • Us the IT workers know this. We've known this for decades now.

      Explain it to suits for whom it's still 1986 and they still think in adding-machine and typewriter mentality. That's what Covid did was explain it most graphically.

      I really think it's real-estate investments driving this "return" mentality. An awful lot of companies make more $ with real estate than with work. McD's is one. Sears is another. Or was. Is Sears still at thing? I thought they'd croaked.

      The only ones where I am at that can't cop

  • by fredrated ( 639554 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2022 @04:10PM (#62882385) Journal

    "executives are making millions of dollars each year"

    the CEO's eat tenderloin while you eat shit.

  • haha (Score:2, Flamebait)

    by argStyopa ( 232550 )

    Google's running into it.
    Apple's running into it.
    Now the NYT is running into it.

    Enable your precious snowflakes and validate them all you like, what does it get you? MORE DEMANDS.

    "give up that ability to be in control of my own personal safety for myself and my loved ones'
    Oh shut the fuck up. People have been 'going to work' since the beginning of the commercial-industrial era during times when real, actual, dangerous diseases like POLIO were widespread. Don't want that job? Fine - let it go to someone

    • I had to go in tons this years -- for physical work, things that cannot be done via VDI or VPN... like schlepping a few cool million dollars worth of hardware around to upgrade everything.

      It was like rebuilding the airplane while still flying it. We did it all, from cooling to power to compute to storage and network. All of it is new.

      And at the end of this effort... we manage it all from home.

      The old days are done. And we're gonna make sure they're still done. The work gets done, and metrics say faster

      • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

        For those things which can't be done remotely, the removal of thousands of commuters from the roads and rails make the experience a lot better too.
        Plus if they close down many of the offices and convert them to residential property, perhaps people who need to work in a specific location could live within walking distance.

        There's so much talk about the environment these days, cutting away a lot of unnecessary travel would be hugely beneficial for the environment and climate targets.

      • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

        Had to do a bunch of that myself over the last 18 months. The thing is prior to the pandemic most of the time I came to work and sat in an office administering an HPC facility that was in a different building halfway across the campus. Unless I need to actually fiddle with the hardware there is no need to be in the office. Even is something has broken I can be in the office faster than the vendors deliver the parts. Hell Lenovo just took over a week to deliver a replacement PSU on a machine with 4x24x7 supp

    • by Steve B ( 42864 )

      When you don't bother to learn any skills other than "management by walking around" while the geeks you sneer at learn skills essential to producing valuable goods and services, yes, you're just gonna have to suck it up and take it when they get demanding.

  • A monkey could write "articles" about as well as the NY Times clowns. They just want to "work from home". If they can do the same work, with the same quality, it just means some middle management person is worried about THEIR job, since they are not nit-picking everyone else.
  • On Monday, the Times offered branded lunchboxes to welcome employees back to the office.

    Is this a newspaper or an elementary school? Negotiate a contract, respect your employees' union, and stop acting like assholes.

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