New Utah Foundation report looks at shift to telework, impacts on air quality

The events of the past year have forced a major shift to telework in Utah, with important implications for traffic, air quality and growth. Today, Utah Foundation releases The Way Home: The Shift to Telework and its Air Quality Ramifications, which focuses on how remote work relates to air quality in Utah, provides new insights gained during 2020, and looks toward the future interplay of remote work and air quality. It is the second installment in Utah Foundation’s Utah Telework Series.

 Among the findings of the new report:

Utah Foundation President Peter Reichard says that, while many employers and employees will return to traditional work settings, telework will retain a significant new role in work arrangements. “As with other strategies that take traffic off the road, telework can help ease congestion and improve air quality,” Reichard says. “With employers’ newfound capacity to implement remote working, Utah will have expanded opportunities to harness telework to reduce traffic, targeting periods with bad air.”

Special thanks to UCAIR for providing project-based funding to support the Utah Telework Series. The Way Home: The Shift to Telework and its Air Quality Ramifications is attached hereto and is available on the Utah Foundation website at www.utahfoundation.org. The first installment in the series, Work Away from Work: The Challenges and Promise of Teleworking, can also be found at utahfoundation.org.

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