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PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) -- City workers in Philadelphia returned to the office full-time on Monday. This comes following a judge's decision late Friday to deny a union's request to delay the deadline ...
Philadelphia city workers returned to the office full-time Monday after a judge denied a union's request last week to block Mayor Cherelle Parker's return-to-work order.
Approximately 4,500 remaining remote workers must return to the office on Monday after a judge denied an injunction over an order from Mayor Cherelle Parker.. The Philadelphia mayor issued the ...
The latest court order concerns airport emergency response workers. In the union's last major work stoppage in 1986, ...
Philadelphia judge denies request to delay return to office full-time 02:13 Meanwhile, city officials believe this move will help residents. Union leaders said their fight isn't over.
Following an order from Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker and a failed court challenge, all municipal employees -- about 26,000 people -- have to begin a return to in-office work on Monday.
Philadelphia's mayor has ordered city workers back to the office. Unfortunately for them, the state is not providing the amount of funding that local transit needs.
The return-to-office order made her and her colleagues feel degraded at work, but she plans to stay. “I have no plans of leaving. I want to stick this job out.
Early this year, Mayor Cherelle L. Parker announced that the City of Philadelphia would require its workers to return to the office five days a week. The policy change was meant to improve public ...
2025 was already shaping up to be a crucial year for remote work. An early move by the Trump administration raised the stakes.
In Philadelphia, city officials acknowledged the return-to-office decision wasn't driven by concerns about productivity. Rather, it was in pursuit of what they called a leadership philosophy.