Despite all of the promises of the e-age, most engineers continue to commute to the office every day.
Last week's election-day ice storm in Maryland nearly paralyzed major
traffic arteries. Peaking around the evening commute, it caused
shutdowns on routes 95, 895, 50 and 32. One friend's usual 45 minute
drive took just under five hours
My commute time didn't change. It takes about 15 seconds to walk
from the office to the living room regardless of weather.
A friend who works from home complains that he never gets a snow
day.
According to the Census
Bureau commute times range from 16 minutes in Corpus Christi to 38
minutes in New York City. 16 minutes isn't bad, but of the 69 cities
listed twenty score 25 minutes or more. That's more than half a work
day of lost time every week, or some 12.5 days a year. A dozen wasted
days is more annual vacation time than most Americans get.
25 minutes on the road probably equates to at least 8,000 miles a
year. According to the U.S.
government statistics, the average fuel efficiency is 23 MPG so
those 8k miles cost over $1000/year just in gas. The IRS allows
deductions of 48.5 cents/mile for business travel, so one could
reasonably argue that the cost to drive 8k miles (once you factor in
depreciation and other costs) is more like $4000. Per year.
Prior to the industrial revolution there were neither cars nor
trains. People had to work pretty close to their homes. But factories
concentrated capital into buildings where workers had to go to earn a
living. Commuting started.
With the Internet and electronics revolutions many pundits predicted
the demise of centralized "factories," especially for knowledge workers
who don't need to be physically close to big and expensive machinery.
But it doesn't seem to have worked out that way. The vast majority of
the engineers I know, if not self-employed, still battle traffic to and
from the office every day.
Ironically, a lot of the at-home jobs created by the
telecommunications revolution are low-paid, low-skilled "opportunities"
like telemarketing, customer support, and click fraud.
Collaborative work and the need for specialized and expensive
equipment means commuting won't go away for most engineers. But one
can't help but wonder how many of us can work from home at least a day
or two a week, saving gas, pollution, money and frustration.
What's your take?
Jack G. Ganssle is a lecturer and consultant on embedded
development issues. He conducts seminars on embedded systems and helps
companies with their embedded challenges. Contact him at jack@ganssle.com. His website is www.ganssle.com.