[sustran] Re: Green activist slams government's teleworking policy

Brendan Finn etts at indigo.ie
Fri Dec 10 20:44:18 JST 2004


Teleworking is good for those whose work permits it. I agree that it has
huge potential, especially in countries with a knowledge economy.

A lot of attention has been paid to technical, organisational, oversight,
the arrangements within the home (or local office/desk), and self-management
issues - i.e. to the work itself.

Two aspects that must also be considered :

a)       The amenities where you are located - if it's dead suburbia, you
don't really have access to very much during the day. After a while, that's
not a lot of fun.
b)       The local transportation system. Public transport is designed to
take you to/from the city centre, along the key arteries. It is ABSOLUTELY
NOT designed for the local run-about journeys of 2-3 km. These are, of
course, the typically journeys of home-makers and teleworkers.

I'd be very interested to see whether the great ecological savings from the
commute to downtown or out-of-town cube-farm is offset by a huge amount of
local trips, and even if people have found themselves having to BUY ANOTHER
CAR because the local transportation doesn't serve them. And as we all know,
short trips by car are ecologically the worst.

Personal example at this stage. I work from home when I'm in Ireland (about
half the time, my journey to work distance should make an interesting
distribution). I'm in the suburbs of Dublin, good bus service to city
centre. But there's nothing for the local trips. What I can do in 5 minutes
by car takes about a half-hour on foot, and probably as long when I factor
in wait time - for the few trips that I could do by bus. I was spending more
time on simple errands (pick up some stationary, computer accessories, call
to travel agent, plus personal stuff) than I ever did in the daily commute.
In August I finally gave in - me, a lifelong public transport advocate - and
bought a car for the local trips. (The shame, the shame!).

The answer definitely lies in local flexible transport - probably a
combination of small bus-based and affordable taxi - where we can get
low-fare trips in shared vehicles at a level of service that is close to
taxi. Tariffs would be higher than regular bus, but probably not too much
more. Problem is, the city authorities don't want to know (they have lovely
highway plans), and both the bus operators and the taxi operators see it as
a threat.

Anyone else got perspectives on this ?

Brendan Finn,
ETTS, Ireland.



-----Original Message-----
From: sustran-discuss-bounces+etts=indigo.ie at list.jca.apc.org
[mailto:sustran-discuss-bounces+etts=indigo.ie at list.jca.apc.org]On Behalf Of
EcoPlan, Paris
Sent: 10 December 2004 11:19
To: XWorkCafe at yahoogroups.com; Sustran-discuss at jca.ax.apc.org
Cc: j.goodman at forumforthefuture.org.uk
Subject: [sustran] Green activist slams government's teleworking policy

Ingrid Marson <mailto:mailroomuk at zdnet.com> , ZDNet UK, December 09, 2004,
14:25 GMT
More :
1.      Source: http://news.zdnet.co.uk/business/0,39020645,39179945,00.htm
2.      Click here
<http://www.forumforthefuture.org.uk/publications/greenteleworkpub_page2012.
aspx>  to download a free copy of the report.
http://www.forumforthefuture.org.uk/publications/greenteleworkpub_page2012.a
spx
3.      Click here to share your views with group :
mailto:XWorkCafe at yahoogroups.com

Jonathon Porritt, ex-director of Friends of the Earth, has criticised
government reports on teleworking as 'tokenist'
An environmental charity has called on the UK government to revise its
policy on teleworking and encourage organisations to use it as part of their
environmental policy.
On Wednesday Forum for the Future launched a report on teleworking which
showed how it can be used to reduce the impact that companies have on the
environment and promote sustainable economic development.
Jonathon Porritt, the programme director of the charity, said government
reports on teleworking do not have enough information on how it can be used
to improve sustainability. In particular, he criticised a report
<http://news.zdnet.co.uk/business/management/0,39020654,39116058,00.htm>
produced by the Department for Trade and Industry in 2003, entitled Telework
Guidance, and a report by the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister as
respectively having "tokenistic references" and "only the odd tokenistic
paragraph" on how businesses should use teleworking to reduce their
environmental impact.
"The government in every level has got to stop pussy-footing around with
sustainable development and embed in its practice," said Porritt.
The charity's report, entitled "Encouraging Green Teleworking", found that
teleworking reduces the need for transport and will therefore contribute to
achieving the government's targets on cutting carbon dioxide emissions. This
is a necessity for the government after its admission on Wednesday that it
will fail to meet its target on cutting carbon dioxide emissions by 20
percent by 2010 -- something Porritt didn't duck during his speech.
"The Prime Minister thinks it's a pretty ambitious goal to achieve its
climate change goal of 20 percent," said Porritt. "Well, so do I when I look
at the government policy."
Sun, which commissioned the charity's report and has had a teleworking
policy for five years, initially started its policy on teleworking due to
the problems of traffic congestion during the dot-com boom, according to
Richard Barrington, the head of government affairs at Sun.
"Part of the reason we started doing this was because of congestion," said
Barrington at the launch event. "We did it purely because people were just
sat in cars on roads. We started with drop-in centres along motorways --
industrial units where we had scattered technology."
Employees at Sun save two hours commuting time per week through teleworking,
according to the report.
Companies can also save money by cutting down on the amount of office space
needed. Sun has reduced its office space needs by 25 percent in the last
four years through teleworking, according to the report.
But one environmental downsides of teleworking is that it requires more
hardware, which requires extra resources to produce and creates more waste.
One way to minimise this impact is for companies to use thin clients.
Barrington said that a significant number of Sun employees in the States are
already using thin clients at home and it is in the process of rolling out
thin clients to home workers across the UK.
Porritt said that the technology side of teleworking is something which is
likely to attract the government. "There's one bit of the sustainability
that the government should like -- teleworking -- because its wonderously
high-tech and glossy.it's lots of whizzy machines."
One important aspect of implementing teleworking is change management,
something which Barrington says Sun is still dealing with.
"We still have a significant percentage of managers who don't like this, who
think 'If I can't see, I can't manage, as I don't know what you're doing,'"
said Barrington. "But if you treat people like adults or grown-ups, they
tend to respond in kind."
Porritt has had a long involvement with environmental issues in the UK -- he
was the Chairman of the Green Party in the 80s, was the director of Friends
of the Earth for a number of years until he left in 1996 to set up Forum for
the Future. He was appointed chairman of the Sustainable Development
Commission, the government's independent advisory body on sustainable
development, in 2000.
In response to Porritt's comments, the government said that it was focused
on giving companies practical advice on teleworking.
"Of course we recognise there are very important environmental benefits to
teleworking. The guidance last year was intended for practical use for
employers and employees," said a DTI spokesman.


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