The banks decision to mandate a blanket return to office policy for employees primarily driven by their geographical location of a 30 mile radius from a hub is a move that fosters inequity, disproportionately burdens protected communities, and places the company at risk for federal legal violations.
Here is why:
If you look at Nicollet Mall location and Portland Columbia Center, two of the company's urban hubs, are glaring with examples of cities rife with gentrification and housing disparities. In both cities, minority and lower-income employees have been pushed out to the outer suburbs due to skyrocketing housing costs. These employees, who live further than wealthier, downtown employees now face exorbitant commuting costs that the RTO mandate conveniently ignores. The company claims they are using a metro Portland area but the exact physical location is on the outskirts of Portland as you enter Gresham. For both Minneapolis and Portland under the 30 mile radius RTO mandate, these employees will face disproportionate financial burden in terms of commuting costs and time spent traveling. This RTO mandate does not account for racial and economic disparities and will amount to disparate impact discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act as minority employees are disproportionately affected by this policy and the bank does not recognize the income disparities exacerbated by its RTO policy. Furthermore, there was no consideration given to employees with disabilities who previously held remote positions. This RTO mandate will place undue burden to employees with disabilities, especially in locations like Fargo and Oshkosh which offer limited public transportation.
The company has done nothing to offset the financial strain this policy places on employees living in lower-income areas. When asked to specifically explain how and what business justification prompted my previously remote job that existed pre-pandemic to change to hybrid. I will be doing nothing different, my entire is remote and scattered geographically. My manager responded with "just accept RTO" this seems to be the answer the company is giving all employees who are asking and demanding to better explain their decision for this mandate, all we get is "just accept RTO"
I encourage all employees to take time and understand the actual impact this will have on their lives and how the bank is not doing anything to offset the undue burden. For example Fargo N Broadway captures a range of socioeconomic groups, from wealthier suburban families to lower-income rural workers. Rural employees will face greater financial strain due to additional commuting costs. Fargo's immigrant and minority communities would be disproportionately affected by the RTO policy. 5Th and Walnut Hub would face a similar inequities, downtown Cincinnati has stark contrasts between affluent professionals and lower-income communities particularly in neighborhoods affected by gentrification like Over-the-Rhine. Affluent professionals would be less impacted by the additional costs than lower-income communities, has the bank recognized this? NO- just accept RTO.
I could go on and on about each location and their 30 mile radius, however in summary this is an unethical approach that has created inequities and disparities in terms of income, housing affordability, transportation access, and commuting costs, particularly for protected communities and classes, this blanket approach while the bank claims is 'equitable' (see their FAQ) the reality is, it is not. This could and I am hoping it leads to legal risks under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, American with Disabilities Act, and Fair Labor Standards Act. U.S. Bank needs to re-evaluate their RTO policy and consider location-specific policies and job duties in an equitable manner that does not cause disparities.
Will the bank change their approach, no so lets hold them accountable!