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119 points

one of the better ideas I’ve heard recently is that commute time should be included in clocked hours

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40 points
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It seems silly to incentivise long commutes.

Why pay someone that drives an hour each way more than someone that cycles to work in twenty minutes?

In that example, based on a wage of £20ph, the driver would be earning £6,666 per year more than the cyclist, that’s nearly an additional £300,000 over a 45 year career… You’d be an absolute idiot to not sell your house and move as far away from your work as reasonably possible.

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39 points

People always bring up this objection, but it’s extremely solvable: just pay employees for their travel respective to the median commute time for that area. Sure, people who live close get a little bonus and people who live far away get slightly less; but it removes all impetus to game the system and helps people who need it.

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12 points

Germany kind of does that… When you file your taxes, you claim the “Pendlerpauschale”, which is, roughly translated, the commute lump sum. For the first 20 kilometres between home and work, people get 30 cents per km, any km after that gives you 38 cents.

It kind of works in the sense that the money you spend to get to work is more or less evened out. It is also paid regardless of your means of transport, so cheaper means (such as bicycles or trams) are incentivised by potentially making you some money in return. However, this is still far from an hourly wage… We’re talking about a few hundred euros, maybe a few thousand per year if you have a long commute.

If you used the median time and would force employers to pay a wage I really don’t get how you would either prevent people to move further away (if you have worker protection laws) or people being fired for living too far away (if you live in the USA). This would also make it far more profitable for higher incomes to commute, which seems kind of counter-intuitive as they are probably the ones who need it the least and who would be able to just move to a new home if they wanted to.

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5 points
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If you pay everyone the same “travel allowance” then that’s just part of everyone’s total compensation and compensation will be reduced somewhere else. There’s no magic money fountain at a business. An employee’s compensation is an employee’s compensation. Simply declaring that “this portion of your pay is a travel allowance” is absolutely meaningless.

A company is not going to pay everyone more money just to help those who live far away who “need it”.

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23 points
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What kind of stupid question is that? Just walk two hours instead of cycling twenty minutes! Duh!

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-7 points

Stupid ideas get stupid questions!

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7 points
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Why mention cycling?

In that case it would be “drive one hour or cycle 4”

Do you mean to suggest the company should hire folks who live closer, period? That is more logical

The operative task is minimize commute.

In most cases a car would be the fastest commute, even if you live close. (Assuming a non hyper dense urban environment)

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4 points

In my country, cycling is incentivized. I get paid for cycling to work.

Besides that, commute time isn’t that much different by bike than by car in my case.

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2 points

That or go remote if there’s no productive reason why they need to be in the office and then just don’t have to pay for a non-existent commute

It’s actually kinda genius from the perspective of getting unneeded commuters off the road, because like hell are those middle managers willing to pay commute time just to be able to more effectively ride your shoulder at the office

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1 point

In that case it would be “drive one hour or cycle 4”

For me it is:

  1. Relax and post on lemmy in PT for 47-50 minutes
  2. Drive for 45-90 minutes
  3. Cycle for about 45 minutes
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-1 points
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You seem to assume that I was implying that the two people in the scenario live an equal distance from the work place.

My scenario implies that the cyclist might live less than ten miles from work and that the driver lives a multiple of that away and ridicules the idea of financially rewarding someone for living further away from the workplace in terms of distance, time and carbon footprint.

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5 points

Why not just pay the price of gas plus maintenance costs then? But I would be for the same wage for commutes because that’s time that the individuals don’t get back in their life.

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-1 points

Why not just live near your work place and save money and time yourself instead of making it your employers problem that you have a long commute.

Don’t get me wrong, I understand the appeal of getting paid more for any reason. I just don’t think that it’s going to go down well in a workplace where some people would be getting paid substantially more for no other reason than they’ve chosen a job that’s far from where they live.

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4 points

Or you could just go remote if you can

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2 points

I don’t want to think about the person that had the option to go remote and yet still chose to commute every day instead.

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3 points

You would also account the gas and maintenance of the car that needs to drive that much. Also, now you are doing “overtime” every day. Thanks no thanks.

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27 points

Maybe we should just have shorter work days or 4 day work weeks so that everyone isn’t just insanely burned out from the rat race.

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14 points

congratulations! companies now have motivation to hire people as close as possible to the workplace, as well as fire those who live further than everywhere else!

those optimizing fucks would run that idea into the ground, i think

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17 points

Don’t you dare destroy my plan to move away from work to spend a full paid working day commuting!

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0 points

🤫

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9 points

well, other than no one can afford to live near the workplace

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6 points

they’ll pick the most efficient option-- to them, it’s not “people HAVE to live this far away or less”. it’s “alright, who lives the farthest away and are potential new hires closer”. basically, they’d define “near” based on where employees live and where job applicants live.

it’d result in a world where the people who can afford to live closer than their coworkers are the people with more job security. it’d be more wealth inequality

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8 points

Elon already put beds in the twitter offices

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7 points
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This would be so shit, yeah.

In a later comment you imagine housing near the workplace to be an expensive way to boost your resume.

I imagine us one step closer to company towns. Housing thats owned and operated by an LLC connected to your workplace and housing issues and workplace issues become one and the same.

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4 points

I don’t see the issue - company towns worked out great, right?

…right?

…oh no…

…oh no no ^no ^^no ^^^no ^^^^no ^^^^^no ^^^^^^no

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5 points

Can I still clock out to play into the breach or do I then actually have to work on my commute?

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-5 points

The company doesn’t control how far away you live. Why should you get paid to listen to podcasts for two hours a day because you chose to live an hour away, and I only get paid for actual work?

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