Goldman's offices will continue to remain open with previously
announced COVID-19 safety protocols, the spokesperson added.
Those measures are: a vaccine requirement, booster requirement
for all eligible populations effective Feb. 1, bi-weekly testing
effective Jan. 10, and mandatory masks.
Financial firms have been grappling with when they can
realistically get back to business-as-usual, and how to
communicate to staff and retain workers amid the uncertainty. A
number of other banks had asked staff to work remotely due to
the latest surge in cases.
Goldman was among the Wall Street banks that had pushed hardest
to bring staff back into offices, and had been the last holdout
trying to keep most staff working in the offices through the
Omicron variant's surge.
JPMorgan Chase & Co, which was also among those pushing staff to
work in its offices, told workers last week
https://www.reuters.com/
business/finance/jpmorgan-citi-staff-start-2022-with-remote-work-2021-12-31
they could from home for the first two weeks of January.
However, JPMorgan said in the memo to employees that all staff
are expected to return to offices no later than Feb. 1.
Citigroup (C.N) has also asked its employees to work from home
during the first few weeks of 2022, a spokesperson confirmed
late last month.
(Reporting by Elizabeth Dilts Marshall in New York and Shubham
Kalia in Bengaluru; Editing by Megan Davies and Daniel Wallis)
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