Telecommuting Gets People Back to Work Post-Sandy

MLSsoccer.com Staff
The staff of MLSSoccer.com works in the apartment of editor-in-chief Greg Lalas (front left). Also in photo: Andrew Wiebe (rear left) and Nick Firchau (at right).
(Image credit: MLSsoccer.com)

Despite the economic damage already wrought by Hurricane Sandy, many businesses are staving off further losses by telecommuting. Employees are logging in from their homes, coffee shops, or nearby offices that have opened their doors to workers displaced by the storm.

Especially in New York, where 250,000 people in Manhattan have been without electricity, with downtown offices shuttered, very recent technology is allowing business to proceed — not exactly as usual, but close enough.

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Rachel Kaufman

Rachel is a writer and editor based in Washington, D.C., who covers a range of topics for Live Science, from animals and global warming to technology and human behavior. Rachel also contributes to National Geographic News, Smithsonian Magazine and Scientific American, and she is currently a senior editor at Next City, a national urban affairs magazine. She has an English degree with a journalism concentration from Adelphi University in New York.