Back-to-work checklist: Steps to consider in emerging from shutdown.

PositionNuts & Bolts

As workplaces reopen after the coronavirus shutdown, here is a checklist from The Conference Board to help your HR department plan these important safety, operational and legal decisions:

ASSESSMENT

* Review and reset business strategy and the implications for current/future staffing

* Assess need to return to the physical workplace and, if so, what work can still be done virtually

* Analyze effectiveness of remote work and infrastructure, including collaboration platforms and videoconferencing

* Assess community readiness, including whether schools and health support facilities are open, allowing workers with children and elder-care issues to return

* Review safety and reliability of public transit, plus employees' comfort with using it

* Check into the viability of all vendors of HRIS systems, payroll services and others to deliver critical employee-related services

* Assess availability of masks (especially where mandated by law), gloves, thermal scanners, removable forehead strips, hand sanitizers, etc.

* Consider your ability to provide ADA reasonable accommodations (PPE example: nonlatex gloves) or religious accommodations (example: face masks that allow for specific religious garb).

* Review employee readiness (those who are/were ill, displaced workers) and willingness to return

PREPARATION

* Create a workplace sanitation and deep-cleaning regimen. Create procedures and training for employee assistance and hygiene

* Restructure the work environment, which may include seating arrangements for greater social distancing, defensive plexiglass shields, rerouted employee movement flows (colored carpeting paths or rope lines) to minimize clusters at entry/exit points, crowded elevators and narrow hallways

* Install "contactless" options: soap dispensers in the restrooms, hand sanitizer dispensers, alternatives to ID badge swiping, etc.

* Determine health status of those returning to work either through temperature scanning, daily self-assessment or a "fitness-for-duty" documentation from a medical professional certifying the worker doesn't have coronavirus

* Review performance targets and possibly reset goals and metrics

* Review and revise (if necessary) any HR decisions, policies and procedures that were adopted or changed during the crisis (see box at right)

* Create new HR policies regarding worker safety, work stoppage or alternative work arrangements in the event of a resurgent COVID-19 (or other disease) outbreak

* Institute new HR...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT