this post was submitted on 30 Sep 2024
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If you were hired as remote you have a pretty strong case for constructive dismissal.
I think you're going to have an uphill battle if you were hired to work in a building and they allowed work from home due to a pandemic. I don't think being slow getting back to the office is going to win you your case.
I feel like being remote for 4 years is no longer about the pandemic. It's become a new standard and by showing financial harm by coming into the office I feel you might have a better case. Example being car insurance. My insurance went down as my car is now a "personal vehicle" vs a "commuter car"
The pandemic was very clearly the initiator.
Being conservative about forcing people back (because most have wanted people back long before now) doesn't change anything legally. You were hired for an in person job, they were forced to have you work from home by actual government orders, and they moved slowly on forcing you back because it was an extended period of time where there was an actual meaningful health risk to a big enough portion of employees.