Google will suspend the option to work from home for most Bay Area workers

With the reduction of COVID and high levels of vaccination in the Gulf region, Google will stop allowing most employees to do their work remotely and will start forcing workers to a three-day office routine this month, the company said Wednesday.

The mandate follows four stalled attempts by digital advertising giant Mountain View to resume office work amid changing threats from the coronavirus pandemic and changing public health contracts. Most recently, Google announced plans in December to end voluntary remote work on January 10, but amid the spread of the omicron coronavirus variant, it postponed the return to the office indefinitely.

Google Bay Area offices are among the company’s chosen locations in the United States, where the new “hybrid” model will be imposed, mixing remote and office work, the company announced on Wednesday. Google has about 45,000 employees in the region, a spokesman said.

Employees can spend March adapting to the new workplace scheme, and the company expects the hybrid model to be fully operational on April 4, Google said in a press release.

To enter offices, workers will need to be vaccinated against COVID or, if not vaccinated, must work under company-approved restrictions, including camouflage and regular COVID testing, Google said.

Fifteen-minute consulting sessions will be available for workers who need help adapting to the new model, the company said.

Workers can apply for a location transfer or a full-time job, Google said, adding that it has approved about 85% of such requests from employees worldwide since June, with about 14,000 workers approved.