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CIOs urge more telework programs

Telework isn’t as widespread in the federal government as it should be, a government improvement group said. The lack of widespread adoption of telework is part of the general management and performance challenges at many agencies, said Max Stier, president and chief executive officer of the Partnership for Public Service.

If senior officials don’t have a true sense of what their objectives are and how to set and measure them, telework won’t happen, Stier said at an event sponsored by the Telework Exchange on April 8.

Telework requires more agency managers with the additional skills necessary to oversee employees who work away from government facilities, he added. Those managers must be able to effectively communicate the agency's objectives so employees can mesh their goals with those of the agency, Stier said.

“If you can’t provide the answer without having them in front of you, telework won’t work. Having employees sitting at their desk isn’t a goal,” Stier said. Agencies need to invest more in training for managers to learn techniques for managing remote workers effectively, he added.

“This is about effective government,” Stier said. "Telework itself is not the end goal."

The National Institutes of Health has 3,300 teleworkers, defined as employees who spend at least one day a week working from another location, but the agency has the technological capacity for 10,000 teleworkers, said Jack Jones, NIH's chief information officer and director of its Center for Information Technology.

NIH has many more employees who perform some of their duties remotely, he added.

“It’s more about mobility,” Jones said, adding that NIH has 9,000 employees who use BlackBerrys and iPhones.

Thomas Boyce, deputy CIO at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, said telework is an important aspect of recruiting and retaining top talent. Some managers might think that teleworking is unnecessary because more people are applying to work for the government during the economic downturn. However, “even in a difficult economy, telework is a way to attract the best,” he said.

Boyce is a member of an NRC committee that's studying work-life balance, and telework is part of that. NRC is considering a pilot program in which a group of employees could take care of family duties during part of the day and perform work activities at home in the evening, he said.

Funding telework and the technology infrastructure it requires is problematic for agencies, Boyce said. He recommended that telework funding be part of disaster recovery and continuity-of-operations planning.

Jones said the forces that are driving telework also include:

  • The ability to gain more productivity from employees.
  • A tool for emergency preparedness.
  • Public law and agency policy.

About the Author

Mary Mosquera is a reporter for Federal Computer Week.

Reader comments

Wed, May 6, 2009 Mohammed siddiqui

hi iam not in telework program yet but i am very much intersted in telework program but i cannot drive to work do you have to drive to work? please let me know thanks

Thu, Apr 30, 2009

At the Veterans Administration the word telework is taboo. The problem is that we need coordinators that will train supervisors and employees on how telework can be a success. Supervisors are afraid of losing control and some employees agree that they lack a sense of focus that would allow them to telework... Telework isn't for everyone or for every position but we need to start with teleowork training at all levels because it can be a cost savings initiative.

Thu, Apr 16, 2009

i telework and am only allowed to telwork few days and cause it is for medical reasons, end up being retaliated against cause my agency only has 2-3 teleworkers out of a thousand employees in one location.

Thu, Apr 16, 2009

Actually that is entirely incorrect. I telecommuted with a company in the District and then when they moved to Arlington. I live in Florida. I never paid any DC or Va income taxes. Check your facts before you post.

Wed, Apr 15, 2009

Unless and until the Congress passes the Telecommuter Act and the President signs it, states (such as VA) will tax the income of out-of-state telecommuters (such as living in TN) with the company picking up some extra taxes, also. As it stands now (with the result of a court case), if you telecommute, you pay income taxes and the company pays taxes where the company has its headquarters.

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