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The Status of Telework in the Federal Government 2004

II. Executive Summary

In support of our responsibilities under section 359 of Public Law 106-346 (FY 2001 Department of Transportation and Related Agencies Appropriations Act), the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) has conducted an annual survey of Federal agencies on telework implementation since 2001. This report summarizes findings from the 2003 telework survey and describes the major telework promotional activities undertaken by OPM in partnership with the General Services Administration (GSA) in 2003.

We can report the number of telework-eligible and teleworking employees continues to grow. In 2003, agencies reported that a total of 751,844 employees (43 percent) are eligible to telework, compared with the 625,313 employees (35 percent) reported in 2002. This represents an increase of 126,531 telework-eligible employees—or an increase of more than 20 percent.

The number of employees teleworking grew from 90,010 in 2002 to 102,921 in 2003. Most noteworthy is that from the first telework survey in April 2001 (when 53,389 employees were teleworking) until October 2003 (with 102,921 reported Federal teleworkers) there has been an overall increase of 93 percent in the number of employees teleworking.

Having received a special appropriation of $500,000 to promote telework in agencies with a participation rate of 2 percent or less, OPM and GSA undertook a number of strategic initiatives to address the situation. Initiatives included special consultation and training for those 2-percent agencies, and a multifaceted educational campaign designed for 2-percent agencies that could be equally useful to other agencies with growing programs. Aspects of the campaign included providing two Internet-based courses for employees and managers, a video tape loop, a manager's handbook, promotional materials such as posters and newsletter articles, and an all-day seminar with research-based experiential training on how to overcome obstacles to telework. To emphasize agency responsibility and bring telework into the scope of expected human resources flexibilities rather than have it remain a new or "special" program, OPM began laying the groundwork for including telework in evaluations of agency human capital management. OPM and GSA solidified their historic partnership in promoting telework with a formal memorandum of understanding.

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For this report, OPM revised the 2003 survey instrument to sharpen and clarify definitions and to bring the survey in line with OPM's view of telework's strategic value in:

  • emergency planning;
  • the establishment of a cadre of experienced employees who telework on a regularly-scheduled basis; and
  • testing the viability of telework for some employees.

OPM also emphasizes the need for Federal agencies to take responsibility for meeting their statutory telework obligations.

The revised survey draws the distinction between core telework (regularly scheduled, at least one day a week) and situational telework (telework on a non-routine basis.) It distinguishes between job-related eligibility criteria and employee-related qualifying criteria. Questions were added or modified to clarify such issues as whether a policy is in place and whether employees are being formally notified of the opportunity to telework.

Data were collected from seventy-four agencies with more than 1.7 million employees, providing a data set comparable to the 2002 sample as a whole, even though reporting configurations were different in some cases. The survey revealed that virtually all agencies have telework policies in place, and that nearly half have formal notification procedures. Agencies reported having crafted a number of policy implementation practices, including formal eligibility and qualifying criteria, tracking systems, procedures for information technology (IT) support, and methods of helping employees meet telework costs (e.g., by offering them excess office equipment).

The overall conclusion of the report is that telework is growing steadily in the Federal Government, whether measured by the number of employees teleworking or by the growing maturity of agency telework programs. Telework is slowly but steadily moving into the mainstream, as an expected part of an effective agency's personnel strategy, rather than as a "special" program needing a great deal of external support.