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Government campaign encourages teleworking before Tokyo Olympics

JAPAN NEWS-YOMUIRI

Zhu Jing, an employee for snack maker Calbee Inc., works at home in Tokyo, organizing data on her laptop.

TOKYO >> The government held a teleworking campaign day last month, with about 60,000 people from about 1,000 companies mainly based in the Tokyo metropolitan area working outside their regular workplaces.

The opening ceremony for the Tokyo Olympics is scheduled for July 24, 2020, and traffic congestion is expected on the day. Thus the government plans to set July 24 as a “telework day” every year through 2020 and carry out the large-scale campaign. It is also aiming to encourage work-style reform at companies.

At major snack maker Calbee Inc., about 270 of the about 330 people usually working at its head office in Tokyo worked at home or other locations on the day. Zhu Jing, 30, began working at her home in Tokyo at 8:30 a.m. after jogging for about half an hour in a park. She mainly organized data via her laptop.

“I can use my time more effectively by doing something else during the time that I normally use to commute,” she said.

About 3,000 workers at Yahoo Japan Corp., or half its employees, teleworked at such places as a shared office in the suburbs and cafes near their homes. Manami ­Inabe, 31, who usually works at the head office, traveled from Tokyo to a shared office in Kamakura to prepare materials for her work.

“I could start working comfortably after enjoying the view from the train,” Inabe said happily.

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