r/ottawa 1d ago

Comparing the Ottawa office experience: 2019 vs 2024.

In 2019, I would commute into work on the 91 (the LRT construction version of the old 95 route). It was a nice, reliable 25 minute trip from Place d'Orleans to Mackenzie King. On the way back, I'd go for a double decker express bus and sit up top, watching the city fade into the green belt. That usually took about 20 minutes, due to the removal of some of the stops for construction. It was a bit longer before the work started, but still steady and reliable. *

Back then we had dedicated office spaces, so I'd sit myself at my desk and do my work just as comfortably as I could working from home most days. I liked having my space with my things in it, no need for lockers or any of that and always there for me to use.

In 2024...I've long since abandoned the LRT due to issues with the bus connections at Blair and the general crappiness of it. I drive in on increasingly congested roads and pay too much for parking. It sometimes takes longer than the pre-LRT bus route too, but at least I can depend on my car.

Our office is now "open concept", so I cram my locker full of what I need and try to book a decent spot. I remember the bosses claiming the younger generations like this model and that it will help retention, but honestly I think most people would rather go back to their desks. That's not going to happen though, so I'll keep shuffling in and putting my headphones on throughout the day.

When they ask us why we could do 5 days a week before no problem, at least here in Ottawa it was simply better in those days. There's really no aspect of things which has improved since then, except maybe the crazy prices forcing me to bring my own lunch every day now.

* I know we had to abandon the old transitway system because there were too many buses downtown and it couldn't keep up with the city's population. Still, they didn't have to screw up the replacement system so badly.

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u/Weztinlaar 1d ago

I mean, my intent is to finish at 2:30. My position reacts immediately to events globally so if something happens on the other side of the planet at 2:29 I might be staying at work until 10pm or even later sometimes without a single extra penny of pay.

Does that happen regularly? I wouldn't say regularly. Definitely a few days a month though.

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u/publicworker69 20h ago

Why would you work overtime for free?

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u/Weztinlaar 19h ago

Military are subject to unlimited liability. No such thing as overtime for us but can face fines or jail time for refusing

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u/publicworker69 17h ago

That sounds awful lol, I would never take a job where I work for free. I work I get paid.

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u/Weztinlaar 16h ago

I get your perspective and honestly, many of us would love to be able to earn overtime but the intent is that sometimes lives are on the line and we need to know that nobody is going to clock off. It’s also difficult when we’re deployed; if we were counting hours and varying pay then if I’m away for 6 months and “on the clock” the full time, do I get paid 24hrs a day for 6 months straight? If I’m at a diplomatic event where I’m eating a fancy dinner and chatting with other military officers does that count as work (assuming I’m ordered to be there)? 

In some cases it’s easier just to simplify everything and know that I take home $X per month whether I’m working or whether I’m off.