CNN
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Last summer, Kristen and Eric Rezabek were feeling pinched. Eric was considering taking on a four-hour commute for higher paying jobs, while Kristen, who works two jobs, planned to add a full day to her already full-time work schedule to help cover their familyâs expenses.
Then, their employer presented a unique offer: an extra paid day off every week, to use however they chose.
âThis was definitely a solution to value our time better, which gives us more options,â Eric said.
The couple, who live with their two children on San Juan Island in Washington state, both work for San Juan County, made up of a small network of islands north of Seattle. Their union had been negotiating raises for its employees, but the county was strapped for cash and couldnât afford to boost salaries beyond a small cost of living increase.
Instead, they agreed upon a , in which employees retain their full-time positions with benefits but can enjoy reduced hours and schedule flexibility.
âThere are lots of methods to provide employee benefits,â County Manager Jessica Hudson said. âAs long as youâre open to different solutions, you might find a different way of doing things that allows you to keep wonderful talented employees, even if itâs not a direct pay raise.â
The county has now completed its first full year of the new schedule and released a report on its findings Tuesday evening. San Juan County touted a host of positive outcomes â from recruiting to retention to employee happiness â and a cost savings of more than $975,000 compared to what the county would have paid if it met the unionâs pay increase demands.
The county said the has attracted a host of new talent: Applications have spiked 85.5% and open positions are being filled 23.75% faster, while more employees are staying in their jobs â separation (employees quitting or retiring) dropped by 48%. And 84% of employees said their work-life balance was better.
âThis is meeting many of the goals that we set out to do when we implemented it,â Hudson said, noting the county is looking for opportunities to expand the initiative.
For the Rezabeks, the schedule has eased their workload and created space for other jobs they love. Kristen, who works a second job at the local hospital, is now effectively getting paid for a six-day workweek while working only 40 hours.
âI feel so much less stress,â said Kristen. âI think itâs less burnout in so many ways. Just having that additional day has been really gratifying.â
The flexibility has also given them time to work on their small farm, for Eric to volunteer with the local fire department and to help them support their kids. They can more easily attend soccer games and events that entail traveling to other islands and would previously have required taking a vacation day.
âThey get a little bit more of our time, which is pretty vital,â Kristen said. âWe have two teenagers and they still need you an awful lot. Itâs great to be able to be present for them and to go cheer them on.â
âWork-life balance is important,â Eric said. âWages arenât everything in life.â
How the 4-day workweek works
Departments across San Juan County have implemented the differently, some staggering staffing to maintain their previous availability to the public while others have shortened schedules to be open just four days a week.
âThose first six months were a little bit of culture shock trying to settle in to a new norm,â Hudson said, âbut now that weâre hitting a one-year mark, while thereâs still a little bit of confusion, most people are not mad. They understand that this is really a benefit for their fellow community members who want to continue to live and work in the islands. Itâs kind of becoming a new normal.â
âI tell people, youâre not going to see things change from your perspective,â said Joe Ingman, a park manager in the county. âOffices are going to stay open, bathrooms are going to get cleaned, grass is going to get mowed.â
His department adjusted schedules to stay staffed seven days a week, and while communication across shifts was an initial hurdle, issues were quickly ironed out.
âIt was probably the smoothest summer Iâve had, and Iâve been working in parks for over a decade,â he said, crediting the new schedule as a boon for recruiting. While job postings used to languish unfilled for months, last summer the applicant pool was not only bigger but more qualified, and the two staffers he hired both cited coming to the county because of the .
âItâs no more cost to the public to work 32 hours â but we have better applicants,â he said.
Ingman also said the has done wonders for his job satisfaction; heâd watched colleagues burn out for years, but now sees a path for his own future in the department.
Thereâs more to life than work
A former college athlete, Ingman now uses his shortened schedule to find fulfillment as a volunteer assistant high school basketball and track coach. His wifeâs employer recently adopted its own â using San Juan County as a template.
The four-day schedule is what attracted Jenni Merritt, who now works in the Public Works department, to her job. A mom of three, sheâd been juggling part-time positions to get the flexibility she needed before she came across her current position.
âIt was one of the biggest pulls to get me to want to work here,â Merritt said. âWhen I saw that I had potential to get a full-time job that would offer benefits and retirement but still give me that little extra time⦠It was a no-brainer for me to apply at that point.â
With her extra day, Merritt works at a used bookstore, a job she calls âsoul fulfillingâ and which contributes a little extra to the household budget.
âTo be able to save up for trips, get something for my kids, and not feel like thatâs an impact on our family income, itâs been absolutely amazing for us,â she said. âTo be able to have this balance now but not feel those tight strings being pulled on our wallet has been a life-changing thing for us and weâre still adjusting to it.â
âLife shouldnât be about just working yourself into the ground,â she added.
Working smarter, not harder
When the new schedule was initially announced, social media commenters were quick to take digs at the county and its employees, arguing that if they could do their jobs in just 32 hours, they shouldnât be paid for 40.
âWe are all very used to the idea that the only way a job can get done is if you work 40 hours,â Merritt said. âWe get some of that pushback, those statements like, âItâs not fair, you get to do your job in 32 and I have to do mine in 40.â We are working more actively during our hours. Itâs keeping us more focused and driven and working, and at the same time making us feel seen and acknowledged as humans and not just workers. We can get the work done in the 32 hours and now we have that extra time to take care of our families and ourselves and get another job if we want to.â
âI donât think that anybody was being lazy or not accomplishing their job,â Kristen Rezabek said. âI feel recharged now on Mondays, and not quite so drained, and I am super motivated to accomplish what I need to do in that four-day workweek. I donât think productivity was an issue before and I certainly donât think itâs an issue now.â
âThe biggest piece that weâve done is to find ways to generate efficiencies,â Hudson said. âItâs been less about, there wasnât enough work to do in the first place, and more about, how can we do that work better? How can we find better solutions to get the job done so that weâre making the best use of taxpayer dollars and of our employeesâ time?â
In a department like Matthew Stewardâs, thatâs meant a focus on prioritization.
âThe high priority items get done quickly, as they always have, and lower priority things maybe take a little bit longer,â he said. âSometimes if thereâs one light bulb out, out of 50, that might take a few weeks to deal with.â
County employees have used their extra time off to spend less money on childcare, volunteer in their kidsâ schools, and contribute to the community â Steward spends the time as a substitute school bus driver for the short-staffed district, going on volunteer calls for the fire department, or escaping to the mountains.
While San Juan Countyâs motivation in adopting a shortened workweek was financial, the benefits its employees cite speak to a larger trend, as workplaces around the country increasingly explore flexible schedules to combat burnout and attract and retain talent. A survey of CEOs this spring found nearly one third of large US companies were looking into solutions like four-day or four-and-a-half-day workweeks. Senator Bernie Sanders has argued for a 4-day, 32-hour workweek, writing in April: âItâs time to reduce the stress level in our country and allow Americans to enjoy a better quality of life.â
Even without a reduction in total hours, a Gallup poll last year found a third day off would be widely embraced: 77% of US workers said a 4-day, 40-hour workweek would have a positive impact on their wellbeing.
When asked if theyâd rather keep a or get a 20% raise, many San Juan County employees noted the fact that getting that kind of salary increase in their current jobs was simply not a viable option. Instead, they see their current situation as the best of both worlds. âYou can choose whether you want that extra time or extra money in the form of a second job, but it gives the employee that choice,â said Kristen Rezabek.
Not all county employees are formally eligible for the 32-hour workweek; right now it only applies to the roughly 155 positions represented by the union. The impact of the shift will continue to be studied over the course of the current contract. The county will present a two-year report next year.
âChange happens by somebody actually doing the change,â said Merritt. âThe only way weâre going to find out if it works is by doing. And so far, I feel happy; I feel seen as an employee and as a human, and I feel like it could be a beautiful step forward for other people if we just trust it and try it.â