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Archive for July, 2006
4 hrs a day in commute.. the pay MUST be good!
July 31st, 2006 by Chris De La Rosa

So I’m reading this article this morning and noticed that the author mentions that “Ron” drives 2 hrs to his job or approx. 90 miles each way (that’s over 144 Km). Back a few years ago I was working partial telecommute. I’d drive to work 2 days a week (yep only 2) and if there were no delays in traffic I’d get to work in about 45min. But it never worked that way, so the normal 45 min drive would take me about 1.5hrs. I absolutely hate traffic, so I’d leave before rush hr for work and leave work after rush hour… I was lucky enough to have a boos that allowed me to do so. So 45 mins driving for 2 days and I hated every second of it. “Ron” I do hope you have a “killer” salary to make it worth your 4hrs a day in commute.

Here’s the article in full…

Ron Rogers gets behind the wheel of his Acura Integra before dawn in Brentwood, Calif. His iPod, loaded with stand-up comedy and audio books, is hooked up to the car stereo.

Rogers needs plenty of audio material for his commute: He drives more than 90 miles — roughly two hours each way — from the San Francisco Bay Area to his job as a public relations specialist at a communications technology firm in suburban Sacramento.

Rogers is one of the 3.4 million workers that the Census Bureau has dubbed “extreme commuters.” At least 2 percent of Americans wake up to a commute of 90 minutes or more one way. Not surprisingly, most of these workers live near major metropolitan centers: New York, New Jersey, Maryland, California, and Washington, D.C., have the most workers with extreme commutes.

The number of super-commuters nationwide has skyrocketed 95 percent since 1990, as workers hang on to lucrative jobs in city centers but move farther and farther afield in search of better housing, low crime, and good schools.

Too Much of a Bad Thing

Unfortunately, commuting is a bitter pill that rarely gets easier to swallow. Researchers have found that people have the capacity for “hedonic adaptation” — in laymen’s terms, the ability to adjust to extreme circumstances, both happy and unhappy.

For instance, classic studies of lottery winners and paralyzed accident victims found only small differences in life satisfaction between these groups and control subjects. But certain experiences — living near a noisy highway, for example — become more aggravating over time, something scientists call “sensitization.” Commuting falls into this category.

A 2004 study by two economists at the University of Zurich found that people tend to overestimate what they’ll get by commuting long distances — i.e., a bigger paycheck, a more prestigious position, the ability to buy more stuff — and underestimate what it will cost them in stress, health, and loss of connection to family and friends.

Driving to Stay in Place

Which brings us back to Rogers. Married with an infant son, he fell into his morning marathon involuntarily. Shortly after he bought his home in Brentwood in 2004, he was laid off from his PR job in nearby Pleasanton. In July 2005, he found the position with SureWest Communications in Roseville, outside Sacramento.

Rogers quickly put his home on the market, but real estate prices were declining as new developments became available and interest rates inched higher. Rogers would still have made a small profit by selling immediately, but not enough to afford the same digs in Sacramento.

“We were afraid we would end up selling and never get into a similar house again,” he says. And so he began his long-distance relationship with work, spending $400 a month on gas and occasionally crashing on friends’ couches in Sacramento.

Then, about four months ago, Rogers and his boss hit on a solution: telecommuting. Rogers now works from home two to three days a week — a setup his company had never tried before.

The Country’s Costly Commuters

In 2004, more than 24 million Americans, or nearly one-fifth of the workforce, worked at home during business hours at least one day per month, according to the International Telework Association and Council. About two-thirds were self-employed, but 7.6 million worked for companies.

With the miseries of commuting well-documented and gas prices hitting record highs, one would expect the masses to be banging down their managers’ doors looking for a deal like Rogers’. But many workers who have the ability to telecommute don’t take advantage of it, according to a new study by the University of Maryland Center for Excellence in Service and consulting firm Rockbridge Associates.

The poll found that only 2 percent of adults who work telecommute full time; another 9 percent telecommute part time and 8 percent have home-based businesses. Of those who could feasibly telecommute, less than half would choose to do so more than two days per week, and 14 percent would not telecommute at all.

The study suggests that our unwillingness to sacrifice our social lives at the office, combined with our love affair with cars, costs $3.9 billion in fuel and time annually.

Telecommuting Isn’t for Everyone

These findings shocked me, since I’ve thoroughly enjoyed working from my home office for the last few years. (Actually, it’s an unfinished space in the basement that’s pleasantly cool in the summer and bone-rattling cold in the winter unless the space heater is turned on full blast.)

One reason workers don’t telecommute is that the financial savings just aren’t that significant for most people, says Charles Colby, president of Rockbridge Associates. “The median commuting time in the U.S. is 20 minutes, and many people only have 15 or less,” Colby explains. “Let’s say gas goes up to $4 a gallon. You commute 20 miles in total in a typical day and your car gets 20 miles to a gallon — you’re looking at four dollars a day.”

An estimated two-thirds of the Fortune 500 companies offer telework options, according to Gil Gordon, president of a New Jersey consulting firm that has been advising companies on the practice since 1982.

He’s not surprised by the University of Maryland/Rockbridge study. “One of things that makes an employer desirable is they are open to flex time or telework or casual dress,” he explains. “Even if people don’t take advantage of it, they like to have the choice. People are savvy enough to have thought about it and know when it’s not right for them.”

Kristin Beltramini, 24, knows telecommuting is right for her. Like many Boston-area workers, she lives across the border in New Hampshire — more than 40 miles from her job at a public relations firm in Woburn, Mass. On a good day, she’ll spend an hour driving to work. But on Friday night, that almost doubles. “People are leaving Boston for the weekend — the lakes in the summer, the leaves in the fall, and skiing in the winter,” she says.

Beltramini drives a Honda Civic that gets 36 miles to the gallon, and fills her tank once a week to the tune of $30. She figures working from home four days a month saves her between $24 and $36 and countless hours of aggravation. She relies on her cell phone, laptop, and high-speed Internet connection to link to the office’s network.

Coming Up with a Plan

If you too want to telecommute, put yourself in your manager’s shoes first, Gordon advises. “Anticipate his or her concerns about your availability — how you’ll answer phone calls, what you’ll do if there is a meeting or if you’re needed in an emergency.”

Also explain, in writing, why working from home will give you the ability to be more productive, to organize your work better, or meet deadlines more effectively. Figure out what parts of your job can be done more efficiently from home. “It’s all about keeping your manager’s blood pressure low,” Gordon says.

As Beltramini has discovered, working at home “is a great chance to be extremely productive because people are not coming to my desk asking for things,” she says. “The only distraction is my cat likes to sit on my lap or walk across the keyboard.”

This article is courtesy of Laura Rowley and can be found at: http://finance.yahoo.com/columnist/article/moneyhappy/7928

Imagine that… $3.9 billion in fuel and time annually and I won’t even put on my air conditioning in my car unless I really have to (when Caron is in the car) just to save on my gas. BTW.. $1.09/L for gas and climbing :(

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Clutter may mean less work getting done.
July 30th, 2006 by Chris De La Rosa

For the past month or so we’ve been doing some much needed updates to our family room in the basement. This included converting and old storage room into a spare bedroom and updating the colour of the walls and changing doors etc to bring up to date. This morning before I started back on this project I thought I’d get a couple hrs of work done (office) so I won’t have to be checking my computer during the day. As I sat down to work I noticed something that was common both in my office and down in the basement where all the work was being done. CLUTTER… you should see the state of my office, paper, pens, markers receipts. You name it and it was all on this small area I call a desk. Even 2 cups with old tea that probably a couple days old. The very same thing can be said for the areas I’m working in down in the basement. Tools, sheet rock, paint cans and brushes, pieces of 2 x 4, ends of electrical wires…a total mess.

I can be a neat freak at times (just ask my kids… especially Tehya), but I must admit… I’ve let myself down. So for the next 20 mins or so I’ll first concentrate on cleaning up so I can get some work done. I simply cannot function without order or in any sort of clutter.

clutter.jpg

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Avoid workplace stress - work from home.
July 28th, 2006 by Chris De La Rosa

Did you read this yet?

Annoying co-workers stress people out

BOSTON, July 26 (UPI) — A new survey says U.S. co-workers’ annoying habits are the number one source of stress in the workplace.

The top complaint was talking too loudly on the phone, followed by constant whining about work, the Boston Globe reported.

Nearly 60 percent of respondents to an online survey by job-search Web site www.truejobs.com said their co-workers’ annoying habits negatively affected their work relationships, and 40 percent said it led them to seek a different job.

When a co-worker gets on your last nerve, it can create a physiological reaction, such as rising blood pressure, that increases stress and decreases concentration, psychologist Philip Quinn told the newspaper.

Despite the irritation, 54 percent of the respondents said they have not considered confronting their bothersome co-workers, the survey said.

And I always thought it was the low wage and the daily commute that stressed me out when I had my 9-5 7 years ago. All this time it was those inconsiderate co-workers that contributed to my stress ;)

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I’ll pick you up at 11 am… FREEDOM!
July 27th, 2006 by Chris De La Rosa

car.jpgMix in 3 daughters and the summer vacation and you have a recipe for an almost daily dose of their friends sleeping over.

Can you say pet-peeve!

On more than one occasion we’ve had parents drop off their kids to sleep over (after it’s been arranged by our daughters) to spend the night and the parents never come up to the door with their kids. For the parents who already know, I have no problem with. But the ones who’s never met us and have no idea who these people are that my daughter will be spending the night with, need to make the time to meet us. When our daughters ever sleep over at their friends place we make it a priority when we drop them off to meet the parents. We need to know who’s gonna be responsible for our daughters.

Whenever we have any friends sleep over there is a small check list we usually run though with them..

- what’s your parents contact number should something happen and we need to contact them.
- do you have any allergies .. afterall they’ll be eating snacks etc that may contain stuff that they could possibly be allergic to.

- do you need to take any medication (basically do you have it packed should you need to take it)

Hey, we want to be prepared in the unlikely event something does happen. I just wish more parents would not see the time their children are away from home as freedom and take the time to meet the parents.

-

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Hot, Humid and Tornados!
July 25th, 2006 by Chris De La Rosa

tornado.jpgA frantic voice on the phone said “Are you watching the weather network?“. It was about 2.30 pm today and Caron (my wife) was calling from work to let me know that there was a tornado watch issued for our area. It took a second or 2 to really register what she was saying, then it hit me. Only last year a tornado ripped through Hamilton and caused some considerable damage to homes and a primary school. It seems with the last few hot and humid summers we’ve been experiencing, we’re seeing more and more tornado watch/warnings being issued by environment Canada.

This is all new to me, after all I come form the Caribbean where we had to deal with hurricanes that you knew days before was coming. Basically you had time to try and prepare. But these tornados comes and goes in a flash it seems.

Here’s some info I found that may be helpful…
What should I do during a tornado watch?
* Listen to NOAA radio or to commercial radio or television newscasts for the latest information.
* Be alert for approaching storms. If you see any revolving funnel-shaped clouds, report them immediately by telephone to your local police department or sheriff’s office.
* Be ready to take shelter.

What should I do during a tornado?

* When a tornado has been sighted, go to your shelter immediately. Stay away from windows, doors and outside walls.

* In a house or small building, go to the basement or storm cellar. If there is no basement, go to an interior room on the lower level (closets, interior hallways). Get under a sturdy table, hold on and protect your head. Stay there until the danger has passed.
* In a school, nursing home, hospital, factory or shopping center, go to predesignated shelter areas. Interior hallways on the lowest floor are usually safest. Stay away from windows and open spaces.
* In a high-rise building, go to a small, interior room or hallway on the lowest floor possible.
* In a vehicle, trailer or mobile home, get out immediately and go to a more substantial structure.
* If there is no shelter nearby, lie flat in the nearest ditch, ravine or culvert with your hands shielding your head.
* In a car, get out and take shelter in a nearby building. Do not attempt to out-drive a tornado. They are erratic and move swiftly.

What should I do after a tornado?

* Look out for broken glass and downed power lines.
* Check for injuries. Do not attempt to move seriously injured persons unless they are in immediate danger of death or further injury.

BTW… according to the evening news the “watch” turned out be be exactly that. W were luck that no tornados touched down or formed. On humid days I’ll be sure to keep checking the weather networks from now on.

Enjoy the rest of the week :)

Chris…

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