Cars are king of the commute. But employers may have a once-in-a-generation chance to change that. – GWC Mag

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When Seattle Children’s Hospital began laying the foundation for its next 20 years of growth, it needed to address an issue seemingly tangential to its mission: what to do about all the cars.

That growth planning began in 2010. Advancements in patient care had improved health outcomes but also meant the hospital would need to double in size to accommodate increased demand for long-term care. Combine that patient volume with a workforce that numbers close to 10,000 employees, and it became clear to officials the number of new parking spaces needed would cost millions and create traffic congestion.

“You’ve got these uses of land that don’t really help you meet your mission except in a very tangential way, and then you have things that are actually serving your patient and providing space for you to do your research and to teach students,” said Paulo Nunes-Ueno, who at the time served as the director of transportation and sustainability for Seattle Children’s. “I was hired right at that realization that in order to double the size of the organization, we needed it to be easier for people to get here without their cars.”

So instead of creating new parking spaces, the hospital system overhauled its parking practices. Employees would no longer pay by the month for garage access. It would instead be a daily choice. Meanwhile, employees who arrived by bus, bike or carpool would receive a roughly $5 bonus every day that they did so, according to Nunes-Ueno, who now works as a sustainable mobility consultant.

To further encourage employees to try other commuting options, Seattle Children’s provided subsidized transit passes and offered free commuter bikes complete with fenders, lights and racks to workers who committed to biking to work at least two days each week — an agreement the organization tracked with a hospitalwide commute calendar. The hospital also redesigned its free shuttle system to connect with local transit.

The goal was to reduce the “drive-alone rate” — or the share of employees driving alone to work — by about a quarter within 20 years’ time, or by 2030, according to Nunes-Ueno. With its new strategies in place, however, the hospital hit that mark a decade early, by 2020.

“We reached the goal 10 years ahead of schedule, saved the hospital millions in parking construction costs [and] reduced carbon dioxide emissions. But most importantly, we made something that made it really easy for these people to come to work and take care of kids who are sick and need help,” he said.

A large building complex with an empty parking lot.

Parking infrastructure at the Seattle Children’s Hospital. In just 10 years, the organization reduced the share of employees driving alone to work by one quarter, former director of transportation and sustainability Paulo Nunes-Ueno told HR Dive.

Retrieved from Seattle Children’s Hospital on March 5, 2024

 

RTO plans present opportunity for reflection

2024 could prove to be a defining year for the U.S. workplace, not least because so many employers that shut down offices at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic have said they’ll mandate that employees return to the office by the end of the year, if they have not already done so.

Last year, a Resume Builder report found that 90% of companies planned to implement a return-to-office, or RTO, policy by the end of 2024, and 70% of this group said they would track employee attendance.

Commercial real estate data is already beginning to trend in that direction. For example, Manhattan office buildings reported an average visitation rate of 63% of pre-pandemic levels during the final week of January, a year-over-increase of 3 percentage points, according to an analysis by the Real Estate Board of New York. Similar trends have been observed in cities such as Miami and Dallas, according to location analytics company Placer.ai.

Still, others argue that the slow recovery of office occupancy shows that while many are back in the office, remote work has staying power; Stanford University economist Nick Bloom went so far as to say last November that “Return to the Office is dead” after observing that work-from-home levels had remained steady last year after falling between 2020 and 2022.

HR departments may need to consider these and other factors when formulating workplace strategies for 2024 and beyond, but an overlooked element of the RTO conversation may be one of its most obvious: how employees get to the office in the first place.

Historically, private car travel has been the predominant way U.S. workers get to work. Data from the U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics shows that since 2010, the share of workers who drive to work alone was consistently above 75% but declined beginning in 2020 and sat at about 69% in 2022. The pandemic appears to have boosted remote work; in 2019, fewer than 6% of U.S. employees worked from home, according to BTS, compared with more than 15% in 2022.

Car commuting is a chief complaint of workers and job candidates who have resisted RTO, according to Gallup. Aside from the stress of traffic, there are also financial and time considerations. One analysis by economist Adam Ozimek for freelance platform Upwork found that the shift to remote work during the pandemic saved employees an average of 49.6 minutes per day that would have been spent commuting.

Accounting for average fuel, maintenance and repair costs, Ozimek and Upwork said, U.S. workers could collectively save roughly $183 million per day by working at home instead of commuting by car. That figure could rise to approximately $758 million if other factors are taken into account — such as the potential for lost life and property from vehicle accidents; environmental costs of pollution; congestion costs; and time savings.

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