Before the
Covid-19 pandemic hit, 6,227 Huddersfield people worked mainly from home, or
about 8.4% of Huddersfield’s 73,808 workforce (compared to the national average
of 14.9%). Yet over the last few weeks many hundreds, even thousands more Huddersfield
workers have joined them in their spare rooms or at their kitchen or dining
room tables.
Amongst
warnings from the Government that some lockdown constraints could stay in place
into 2021, businesses are dealing with an unexpected cultural shift in how many
of us do our work. Talking to many Huddersfield people who have been asked to
work from home, for many it has been a pleasant success.
I have found myself still working at 8pm/9pm and beyond as I have
forgotten to clock out and whilst many people might think working from home
means doing less work, more often than not, the reverse is true for industrious
and hardworking employees. When you don’t have that break of the commute to the
office, the workday can blend into ones home life. Talking of commuting, the
average British worker has a daily commute of 11.9 miles, whilst locally…
The average daily
commute for a Huddersfield worker is 7.7 miles
At least
working from home, the commute is only to the dining room table or spare
bedroom. Speaking to some friends of mine that are new to working from home, they
said to me that they can feel out of the office-loop as they miss the
‘water-cooler’ moments or spur-of-the-moment brainstorming session over a brew,
it’s tough to reproduce that from home.
Don’t
forget to get into your garden (if you have one), stretch those legs. Ensure
you are taking advantage of the daily exercise allowance. I see so many people
walking around our neighbourhood daily who I haven’t seen before. Let’s hope
they keep up the habit once lockdown is removed. You have to admit, it’s quite
nice especially as there are far less cars on the road.
Huddersfield workers commute 479,761
miles a day to work
That’s to the moon and back – every
day!
Some
people find it difficult to adjust to working from home and feel guilty if they
don’t reply to co-workers emails or phone calls straight away. My friends
stated that they didn’t want their team-mates to wonder if they were taking it
easy rather than pulling their weight. The best advice I can give from working
with my team, is to over communicate, and I suggested (as I do to you) to tell
their bosses and colleagues what they are doing and share their accomplishments
using those video conferencing software packages.
The really
hard part is having a dedicated space in your home. Attempt to set up a workspace and make it out
of bounds to the rest of your household while you are working (although that is
very difficult when you have children or your partner is having to work from
home as well). Is there anything worse than being on an important call to your
boss or a client, only to have a delivery driver knocking on the door or having
your kids and dogs yelling and barking in the background? It’s a balancing act!
Interestingly,
looking at the stats and this internment in Huddersfield people’s homes could
be a catalyst for people wanting to move home later in the year be it for rent
or for sale, thus giving a vital boost to the Huddersfield property market.
Would it surprise you that…
21,574 Huddersfield households are
either at full capacity
or officially overcrowded?
The definition of full capacity is
when the household has enough bedrooms for the occupants. The definition is set
out in ‘The Allocations Code of Guidance’, which recommends that the 'bedroom
standard' is adopted as a minimum measure
of overcrowding.
This means one bedroom should be provided for
·
each adult couple.
·
any other adult aged 21 or over.
·
two adolescents of the same sex
aged 10 to 20.
·
two children regardless of sex
under the age of 10
That means 31.2% of Huddersfield
households do not have
a spare bedroom for their occupants to
work from
(compared to the national average of
16.64% of household)
Even worse,
I suspect there are many Huddersfield families with two teenage boys or two
teenage girls, and guidance is suggesting they can share a bedroom – do they
live in the real world? This means there are probably even more Huddersfield
households that are at full capacity or even more overcrowded than the stats
suggest, meaning plenty of people will be working from dining room tables (if
they have a dining room that is) and quite probably the kitchen table … a
recipe for even more people wanting to move home later in the year.
So, I
don’t know how many Huddersfield people are working from home, yet looking at
the newspapers the consensus is that it has at least doubled. For all the
reasons mentioned in this article, this looks like we could have a pressure
cooker scenario of demand for Huddersfield property once the restrictions have
been fully lifted.
Meanwhile, a message to all you new homeworkers in Huddersfield.
Working from home is a tough one. The best advice I can give is to change your way
of thinking. I know many friends who are
missing their offices right now, yet is office-working really so great?
Consider the relentless risk of disturbance when you are trying to finish that
important project, the recirculated air conditioning with its germs, the
shortage of quiet meeting rooms and as I have already mentioned before, the
drawn-out and expensive commute.
Try breaking the cycle of thinking that being at work - time
is productive and not being at work - time is only leisure. The new way of
thinking that accepts the concessions of home-working and discards the traditional
20th Century conventions of office working. Yes, the downside is that as humans
we are very sociable creatures and we acutely feel the need to be in face to
face contact with each other often, meaning lockdown is quite tough for many of
us. Yet, if we are able to connect the positive prospects for the future working
and the situation that Covid-19 offers us, then together as a society we should
be able to find the right balance between working from home and coming together.
In the meantime, be considerate of each other and keep safe we are all in this
together and we will all overcome this together.
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