Here’s a thing new to
me:
A couple of days ago my
manager sent round an email asking for his staff members’ cell phone numbers. “I
would like to be sure I have everyone’s proper numbers.”
Now, this isn’t the
tech/business world where your employer demands that you be contactable all the
hours God sends, and my work isn’t exactly mission-critical, so there’s no need
to call me at 0330 demanding [some arcane datapoint over which I have no
control anyway]. This is by way of me saying that so far I haven’t given out my
mobile number to anyone at work.
A few members of the
greater team immediately hit reply-all and handed over their digits, but I’ve
so far abstained.
Then yesterday the
CFO/CLO sent an all-staff email announcing that the company’s going to conduct
a test of their “emergency contact process”. We’re supposed to reply to a group
text so they can collect response-time data for…data collection purposes.
In theory this seems an
okay thing. After all, our place of business is in downtown Washington, D.C.,
which could have emergency-bad things happen to it. And we are in the
scientific arena, which makes us a potential target for Repugnant-Kleptocrat
emergency-bad things, so I can see that they might want to be able to reach
everyone in a timely manner to communicate emergency-bad things to us all.
(As an aside—why are
there never emergency-good things?
Wouldn’t it be nice if there were?)
But here’s the deal: yes,
I have a mobile phone. But I do not live in it. It is literally on for less
than one hour out of 24, while I’m on Metro. I occasionally turn it on if I
need to check something on the Web, or I want to notify someone that I’m
running late. I do not call people on it just to chat, and I only text as a
last-measure form of communication.
And yet, despite me telling
people I need to speak with about important matters that mobile is the worst possible way to reach me, I still
turn on the thing to discover three-day-old voicemails or texts from yesterday
morning.
Folks—the shelf-life of
voicemails and texts is pretty short, so if I tell you that I don’t ever have
the phone on, please use my preferred methods of communication: email or
landline. Or else somehow just beam your important thoughts directly into my
brain.
So, the upshot is: yeah,
I’ll give my digits to my manager (although I suppose I could debate how “proper”
they are), and yeah, I’ll try to remember to have the sodding thing on at the
day and time of the planned emergency drill. But I’ll just point out that were this drill to be a real emergency-emergency, I’d still be in the street.
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