- California is mandating that state employees return to the office four days a week starting by July.
- The move aligns with a White House mandate for federal workers to return full-time.
- Companies like Amazon and JPMorgan also require in-person work, ending remote policies.
California is requiring most state employees to come into the office at least four days a week by July 1.
Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office said on Monday that the state employs 224,000 full-time workers and that over half have returned to daily in-office work.
“When we work together, collaboration improves, innovation thrives, and accountability increases,” Newson said in a statement on Monday.
The announcement said that telework would be granted on a case-by-case basis, including for employees who do not live near their offices.
The order follows a wider White House mandate to return federal workers to the office full time. States, including Ohio and Virginia, require their employees to work in person, ending pandemic-era telework policies.
Similarly, companies including Amazon, JPMorgan, and Salesforce have required their employees to return to in-person work.
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