{"id":141270,"date":"2021-10-09T21:57:42","date_gmt":"2021-10-09T21:57:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/precoinnews.com\/?p=141270"},"modified":"2021-10-09T21:57:42","modified_gmt":"2021-10-09T21:57:42","slug":"despair-of-the-businesses-next-to-civil-servants-almost-empty-offices","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/precoinnews.com\/world-news\/despair-of-the-businesses-next-to-civil-servants-almost-empty-offices\/","title":{"rendered":"Despair of the businesses next to civil servants' almost empty offices"},"content":{"rendered":"
With its affordable accommodation, meeting rooms, restaurant and well-stocked bar, the Civil Service Club in the heart of Whitehall used to bustle with mandarins. Today, however, business is slow \u2013 apart from at weekends.<\/p>\n
\u2018They have all got used to working from home,\u2019 one member of staff told The Mail on Sunday last week.<\/p>\n
\u2018Even now, with politicians telling people to get back to the office, they prefer to stay at home.\u2019<\/p>\n
Occupancy rates for the club\u2019s 26 bedrooms stand at 67 per cent, compared with 93 per cent two years ago.<\/p>\n
\n<\/p>\n
GHOST TOWN: Caf\u00e9 owner Gianni Covelluzzi (left) and hairdresser Emilija Zaliauskaite (right) have seen business in Whitehall plummet<\/p>\n
About 500 civil servants have cancelled their memberships.<\/p>\n
\u2018The only time the rooms are really used are at the weekends when the members come to London to see a show or go out for dinner,\u2019 added the staff member ruefully.<\/p>\n
Conservative Party chairman Oliver Dowden told civil servants last week to \u2018get off their Peloton [exercise bikes] and get back to their desks\u2019 \u2013 a reference to Sarah Healey, Permanent Secretary at Mr Dowden\u2019s former Department for Culture, who admitted that working from home had given her more time to exercise.<\/p>\n
Such pleas are falling on deaf ears, leaving not only the bars and bedrooms of the Civil Service Club deserted, but putting local businesses at risk.<\/p>\n
Emilija Zaliauskaite, who runs Zack\u2019s, a barber, on Monck Street, close to the Home Office, fights back tears as she explains that she is selling up after 16 years.<\/p>\n
\u2018I am lucky if I get two customers a day,\u2019 said the 46-year-old Lithuanian. \u2018As things are now, I can\u2019t afford to pay my bills or look after my 16-year-old son. I am going to have to sell and do something else.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
MINISTRY OF QUIET: Mandarins no longer carouse at the Civil Service Club<\/p>\n
The top civil servant slapped down for boasting about riding her Peloton bike rather than working in the office is no longer working from home \u2013 because she has moved out while the property undergoes an expensive refurbishment.<\/p>\n
Sarah Healey, permanent secretary at the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, was accused of undermining Ministers when she hailed the benefits of working from home and said: \u2018I have a Peloton and I can just get on my bike whenever I have a teeny bit of time.\u2019<\/p>\n
However, her \u00a3700,000 house in East Dulwich, South London, is surrounded by hoardings, with plans submitted to the local council detailing major renovation work including \u2018Crittall- style double-glazed doors\u2019 and an \u2018external courtyard area\u2019.<\/p>\n
As a rebuke, Tory Chairman Oliver Dowden last week told staff to \u2018get off their Pelotons and get back to their desks\u2019, adding: \u2018People want the Government to lead by example.\u2019<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
The top civil servant slapped down for boasting about riding her Peloton bike rather than working in the office is no longer working from home<\/p>\n
\u2018It is so selfish that these people won\u2019t go back to their offices. It just feels like the businesses that were there for them for years have been abandoned.\u2019<\/p>\n
Muhammad Zahid, who has spent nine years at Regent Dry Cleaners on Horseferry Road, has suffered a similar experience. \u2018It really feels like the area is becoming a ghost town. It won\u2019t be long before a lot of the businesses that had been here for years will simply fold.\u2019<\/p>\n
Gianni Covelluzzi, whose Horseferry Road cafe is near the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities and the Department for Transport, is also struggling.<\/p>\n
\u2018We used to have queues out the door at lunchtime. It\u2019s nothing like that now,\u2019 he said.<\/p>\n
Mr Covelluzzi, 58, had hoped to give staff a pay rise but business has been poor.\u00a0<\/p>\n
\u2018If these people don\u2019t come back to the office, businesses like mine will simply disappear.\u2019<\/p>\n
His hopes may be dashed if job advertisements for government departments are anything to go by. One for a post at the Treasury, whose boss Chancellor Rishi Sunak has encouraged people to return to their desks, said employees would be allowed to work from home in a hybrid pattern on a permanent basis, spending two to three days a week in the office.<\/p>\n
The taxman has proved equally reluctant to leave home. Jim Harra, boss of HM Revenue & Customs, told his staff to return to the office on September 29 \u2013 more than two months after home working restrictions were lifted \u2013 and said they need come in only one day a week.<\/p>\n
Meanwhile, the public has been warned that tax rebates will not arrive until February and barely a third of 4.5 million items of post are cleared within a target of 15 days.<\/p>\n
A drip of civil servants returning to Whitehall offers little comfort to James Keeper, who runs the Blues & Royals coffee stall at Embankment Underground station.<\/p>\n
\u2018If it weren\u2019t for the builders who worked all through the pandemic, I would be finished,\u2019 he said. \u2018A lot of these office workers are clinging on to this idea that they don\u2019t feel safe. It just rings hollow to me. They\u2019ve got comfortable at home, that\u2019s what it comes down to.\u2019<\/p>\n
By Michael Powell for the Mail on Sunday\u00a0<\/p>\n
Working from home has created a \u2018mental health timebomb\u2019 for millions of Britons, according to a leading counselling clinic.<\/p>\n
Paracelsus Recovery said cases of stress, anxiety and depression had soared during lockdown with abuse of drugs and alcohol and eating disorders also spiking.<\/p>\n
It said millions of people had been \u2018conscripted into the largest remote working experiment in history\u2019, which has resulted in a new \u2018home sickness\u2019 syndrome as injurious to health as smoking.<\/p>\n
Jan Gerber, its founder, said: \u2018Working from home is lonely and stressful and these are the two leading causes of mental health issues worldwide. Most of the clients we are seeing have a negative mental health impact from the working from home lifestyle.\u2019<\/p>\n
He said home working was \u2018rooted in a lack of structure\u2019, adding: \u2018People have been completely isolated from any meaningful interaction with colleagues. Those who are single have been totally on their own and we know loneliness is as bad for health as smoking.\u2019<\/p>\n
He said remote work during lockdown was more harmful than in normal times when people could work in a cafe or go out for dinner in the evening. \u2018Instead, we have been calling it remote work when we should be calling it isolated work,\u2019 he added.<\/p>\n
Polling for the Royal Society for Public Health found 67 per cent of home workers felt less connected to their colleagues than before the pandemic and 56 per cent now found it harder to switch off.<\/p>\n