**JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon Firm on Office Return Policy**
Jamie Dimon, the CEO and Chairman of JPMorgan Chase, has been vocal about his stance on employees returning to the office, rejecting hybrid or work-from-home arrangements. During a recent town hall meeting on February 12, an employee who challenged Dimon on the return-to-office (RTO) policy was reportedly terminated, as reported by Forbes.
Nicolas Welch, an analyst in tech operations who has been with the bank since 2017, raised his concerns during the 45-minute session attended by around 1,000 employees, both in-person and via Zoom. Welch, who is navigating a divorce, expressed that flexible work hours would greatly assist him with family and childcare responsibilities. He works from the Polaris office in Ohio, which serves 12,000 employees, and noted that he had not yet received the RTO memo.
Welch thanked Dimon for “listening to an old hillbilly like me” and highlighted that his team consists of seven members spread across various countries, including Argentina, India, and the United States, all operating in different time zones. He proposed that the decision regarding the necessity of an office environment should be left to individual team managers rather than enforced company-wide. His comments were met with applause from the audience, and many colleagues expressed their support throughout the day.
In response, Dimon firmly rejected Welch’s suggestion, stating, “There is no chance that I would leave that up to managers. Zero chance. The abuse that took place was extraordinary.” He criticized employees for “wasting time” in Zoom meetings and noted that the workforce had increased by 50,000 over the past four to five years, indicating that many were not fulfilling their job responsibilities.
Later in the town hall, Dimon dismissed an employee petition aimed at rescinding the RTO mandate, stating, “I don’t care how many people sign that f***ing petition.” Currently, JPMorgan Chase has mandated that all 317,233 employees return to the office, although 40 percent of them are allowed to work from home two days a week as part of a hybrid schedule.
