Submitted by Mei_Flower1996 t3_121nbk4 in boston
Hi everyone,
Bioinfo MS student. My field has remote/hybrid work more as the rule rather than the exception. This makes sense, as a lot of the work can be done on your computer.I asked around on reddit, and was surprised to learn that pre-COVID, Bioinformatics work was, by default, fully-on-site.
But I got curious about something- Boston notoriously has some of the worst worker commutes in the US. There's a well established idea that when jobs are in Boston/Cambridge, many people can't actually afford to live near there, and the commute is horrible.
Was hybrid work a little bit more popular ( than the US average) in the Boston area ( for jobs that can be done remotely) prior to COVID?
Edit: Thank you for all the responses! It's really soothing my curiosity.So it seems a little WFH was always a thing, but truly hybrid/remote is more of a COVID era thing. That makes sense.
Second edit: If my " damn that's crazy!" comments seem weird, I'm sorry. Whenever I post on reddit I feel like I need to reply to each comment as if I were talking to the person IRL, and I'm just shocked how it seems ,at least half the time, people that do jobs that could be done from home were forced to come in 5 days a week.
nattarbox t1_jdmhhs9 wrote
Design/UX in tech, I would do maybe one day at home max, pre-Covid. Often not even that.
Folks in our office with kids and/or long commutes would do two or more days at home pretty regularly though, and it wasn’t a big deal. There were always a couple people fully remote, usually high skilled individual contributors who could ask for something like that and be trusted with it.
People with very long commutes (Newburyport, Worcester, NH/ME) would work from the train too and count that as part of their day.