Review of leases requested after report of unused building
By JAMES MacPHERSONMay 14, 2021 GMT
The North Dakota Information Technology Department building is shown on Normandy Street, Thursday, May 13, 2021, in north Bismarck, N.D. North Dakota taxpayers are on the hook for nearly $3 million in rent over the next two years in unused office space for a state agency that intends to allow most of its more than 400 employees to continue to work from home indefinitely. Officials say the North Dakota IDT’s 85,000-square-foot leased space in a newly remodeled privately owned office building in north Bismarck is unoccupied, except for about a dozen employees. (Tom Stromme/The Bismarck Tribune via AP)
ND Paying $1.5 Million A Year For Mostly Empty Building.
The North Dakota Information Technology Department building in north Bismarck is the newly remodeled 85,000 square foot home to some of the best tech minds in the state. Or at least it once was, it seems that
home is now actually home to a large majority of it s more than 400 employees. The pandemic scattered much of the world s workforce out of their conventional workplace. Slowly, most employees returned to work.
Bruce Springsteen famously sang in Hungry Heart , one of his first big hits, I went out for a ride and I never went back
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Montgomery: The city will offer 100 $50 Walmart gift cards each at four neighborhood COVID-19 vaccine clinics in an attempt to combat declining numbers in the state. The clinics will not require an appointment, insurance or identification. “Our goal has always been to protect the lives and livelihoods of everyone in Montgomery,” Mayor Steven Reed said in a statement. “The COVID-19 vaccines are our best chance to do so.” The city is also organizing free rides to and from the clinics for those without transportation. People can call 211 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. on weekdays to schedule private transportation. Montgomery has also partnered with Uber on the initiative, and residents can use promo code 10MVMONTGOMERY to schedule a ride through the app. COVID-19 vaccine uptake in Alabama continues to decline rapidly, with the state
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) North Dakota taxpayers are on the hook for nearly $3 million in rent over the next two years for unused office space for a state agency that intends to allow most of its more than 400 employees to work from home indefinitely.
By Pat Sweeney
May 13, 2021 | 4:41 PM
North Dakota taxpayers are on the hook for nearly $3 million in rent over the next two years in unused office space for a state agency that intends to allow most of its more than 400 employees to continue to work from home indefinitely.
Officials say the North Dakota Information Technology Department’s 85,000-square-foot leased space in a newly remodeled privately owned office building in north Bismarck is unoccupied, except for about a dozen employees.
The agency says it has favored “teleworking” even before the coronavirus pandemic hit and will continue to do so.