It will be interesting to reconcile the mixed messaging from Ford with how the feds are going to justify a return to office.
>Doug Ford justified the mandatory return of public servants to the office by saying that in-person work increased productivity. But the department responsible for the measure disagrees, reveals a document obtained by Le Droit under the Access to Information Act.
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>In an email sent to Caroline Mulroney just hours before the announcement, her communications director, Andrea Chiappetta, offered her possible answers in case journalists asked her if the decision „proves that employees were not as effective working from home.“
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>“No. The decision to return to a standard of five days of office presence per week is not related to any changes in supervision or operations and is not a performance indicator,“ he writes. The decision is aimed more at „ensuring that operational services continue to be representative of the people and businesses we serve,“ the communications director concluded in this email exchange.
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>Caroline Mulroney never stated that the decision was related to the productivity of Ontario public servants, but she never publicly contradicted Doug Ford on this issue either.
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It will be interesting to reconcile the mixed messaging from Ford with how the feds are going to justify a return to office.
>Doug Ford justified the mandatory return of public servants to the office by saying that in-person work increased productivity. But the department responsible for the measure disagrees, reveals a document obtained by Le Droit under the Access to Information Act.
>
>In an email sent to Caroline Mulroney just hours before the announcement, her communications director, Andrea Chiappetta, offered her possible answers in case journalists asked her if the decision „proves that employees were not as effective working from home.“
>
>“No. The decision to return to a standard of five days of office presence per week is not related to any changes in supervision or operations and is not a performance indicator,“ he writes. The decision is aimed more at „ensuring that operational services continue to be representative of the people and businesses we serve,“ the communications director concluded in this email exchange.
>
>Caroline Mulroney never stated that the decision was related to the productivity of Ontario public servants, but she never publicly contradicted Doug Ford on this issue either.