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The Status of Telework in the Federal Government 2004

V. OPM/GSA Efforts to Promote Telework

Agencies with Under 2-Percent Teleworkers in 2002

House Report 107-575 on the Treasury, Postal Service and General Government Appropriations Act, 2003, included $500,000 to carry out a "Telecommuting Training Program … to educate executive branch managers about the benefits and logistics of telecommuting." The conferees directed OPM "to target executive agencies where less than 2 percent of employees telecommute." Working in partnership with GSA, we provided special assistance to these 20 agencies, mostly small organizations, helping them individually to develop policies and programs. We also held a special workshop for them, featuring presentations by other small agencies who had successfully met the unique challenges of a small agency telework program.

Multifaceted Educational Campaign

We found that many of the needs of the 2-percent agencies were similar to those of other agencies whose programs were still growing. They needed user-friendly promotional materials, practical guidance for managers, and help in addressing common telework barriers. In partnership with GSA, we developed an educational campaign to help all agencies, including the

2-percent agencies, to become more self-reliant in promoting their own telework programs and overcoming common obstacles.

Campaign elements included Telework 101 web-based training modules for employees and managers available at www.Golearn.gov, a video loop for lobby displays, promotional materials such as posters and tent cards, and materials to be placed in agency publications. At an all-day meeting, we trained agency telework coordinators and human resources officials in how to structure a campaign and use the materials. We also offered sessions on the latest in telework policy, technical discussions with experts, and two hours of hands-on training in consultation skills for overcoming barriers. The training was conducted by Mr. Gil Gordon, a noted telework authority, and based heavily on the findings from our focus group studies. At the same event, Human Resources Directors were provided an opportunity to meet with OPM's Associate Director for Strategic Human Resources Policy for a discussion of telework in the context of strategic policy.

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Other Strategies for Empowering Agencies

We also provided empowering resources to agencies through a new manager's guide to telework, improvements to the joint GSA/OPM website, www.telework.gov, and quarterly meetings for agency telework coordinators. A teleconference option makes the meetings accessible to coordinators in other cities. Together and separately, OPM and GSA have presented at numerous professional associations, community groups, managers' training programs, and other forums attended by Federal leaders. During 2003, OPM and GSA solidified our longstanding partnership through a formal Memorandum of Understanding.

To promote telework's role as an element in the continuity of operations, OPM updated its guidance on telework in emergency situations. Director James encouraged agencies to use telework in a variety of business-disrupting situations, ranging from Hurricane Isabel to traffic congestion caused by huge public events.

Preparation for Evaluating Agency Telework Programs

In keeping with our strategic focus on enhancing agencies' responsibility for telework, we have begun laying the groundwork for including telework in OPM's evaluation of agency human resources programs. Besides holding agencies accountable, this change will define telework clearly as a basic human resources tool, rather than as a new program in need of promotion.