Google is indefinitely pushing back its January return-to-office plan globally amid growing concerns over the Omicron variant of the coronavirus and some resistance to company-mandated vaccinations. In August Google had said it would expect workers to come in about three days a week from Jan. 10 at the earliest, ending its voluntary work-from-home policy.
Google executives told employees that the company would put off the deadline beyond that date. Insider first reported the news. Google said the update was in line with its earlier guidance that a return to workplaces would begin no earlier than Jan. 10 and depend on local conditions.
Nearly 40% of U.S. employees have come into an office in recent weeks, Google said, with higher percentages in other parts of the world. But as it was reported last week by several US news agencies that hundreds of employees have protested the company’s vaccination mandate for those working on U.S. government contracts.
Apparently, Google was one of the first companies to ask its employees to work from home during the pandemic. It has about 85 offices across nearly 60 countries.