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Moms navigate a post-pandemic shift back to offices

As the labor market recovers from its pandemic slump, companies have been reevaluating workplace policies, and some business leaders have insisted on in-person work as being more productive and collaborative. Many companies – 72%, according to an April survey of employers in 17 nations – have mandated a return to the office for at least part of the week. While the shifts over the past year or so can pose challenges to workers of all types, parents in particular feel the reduction in flexibility. 

Yet many mothers are also sticking with their jobs, and surprisingly few have been forced out of the workforce. Labor participation by women in the age range of 25 to 54 years old just notched a monthly record of 77.8% in June. 

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Calls to return to the office haven’t been easy for workers to hear – especially those with children. Yet many mothers are managing the shift, and female employment has stayed surprisingly strong.

In many cases, the post-pandemic office is friendlier to mothers than the pre-pandemic version.

Some working mothers, like Lixiao Wang in New York, have thrived by going into an office. With remote work, “the boundary is very blurry,” Ms. Wang says. “Your desk is right in your bedroom.”

For many moms, child care cost and availability remain key challenges. By one estimate, child care facilities, though recovered from pandemic declines, are still up to 3.6 million slots short of the need.

When the pandemic hit in 2020 and New Jersey’s government agencies went remote, Monica Valenzuela couldn’t have been happier. “Everything just worked,” recalls the mother of two. “It was easier to be with my family. … Because I was very happy, I was motivated and efficient.”

But in 2021, her state agency called her back to the office, three and then four days a week. Her home office in Morristown was replaced by a windowless cement cubicle, and flexible hours went back to a strict 9-to-5 schedule. “The fact that the place we were working had no windows – zero – made me really sad and claustrophobic,” she says. Two hours of commuting every day didn’t help either. 

A car accident last year caused her to take stock: “I felt like the universe was telling me something, like, ‘Monica, you cannot continue like this.’ … I really liked my work, but it seemed to me that they didn’t really adapt to the new era that we are living in,” she says. Last summer she quit and took a new job – all remote.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Calls to return to the office haven’t been easy for workers to hear – especially those with children. Yet many mothers are managing the shift, and female employment has stayed surprisingly strong.

As the labor market recovers from its pandemic slump, companies have been reevaluating the arrangements they offered employees during the health emergency. High-profile business leaders have insisted on in-person work as being more productive and collaborative. Many companies – 72%, according to an April survey of employers in 17 nations – have mandated a return to the office for at least part of the week. While the shifts over the past year or so pose challenges to workers of all types, parents in particular feel the reduction in flexibility. 

Strains can be especially severe for those struggling to pay for child care. Yet, amid the stresses, many mothers are also sticking with their jobs, and surprisingly few have been forced out of the workforce. Labor participation by women in the age range of 25 to 54 years old just notched a monthly record of 77.8% in June. 

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff

Toddlers play at a day care facility in Premont, Texas, in February 2023. Pandemic lockdowns at one point closed about two-thirds of day care centers. Child care options have since rebounded, but by one estimate the system is still up to 3.6 million slots short of the need.

The lockdown work-from-home era may be over. But in many cases, the post-pandemic office is friendlier to mothers than the pre-pandemic version.

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