State workers are pushing back against Governor Gavin Newsom’s directive to transition from remote work back to in-office roles, raising concerns that this shift will lead to a surge in vehicles on the roads, potentially undermining California’s carbon neutrality goals.
The California Attorneys, Administrative Law Judges, and Hearing Officers in State Employment (CASE) have expressed strong opposition in a critical letter, asserting that any agency implementing Newsom’s Return-to-Office (RTO) order without examining its environmental repercussions is breaching the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA).
Labeling the mandate as a “discretionary project” under CEQA, the union emphasized that the law obligates state and local entities to assess and disclose the environmental consequences of significant initiatives before proceeding.
CEQA requires agencies to “disclose and evaluate the significant environmental impacts of proposed projects and adopt all feasible mitigation measures to reduce or eliminate those impacts,” highlighted the letter.
CASE contends that agencies enforcing the RTO directive without these evaluations are engaging in “an abuse of discretion.”
The union, which advocates for nearly 5,000 state-employed legal and judicial professionals, cautioned that the policy might lead to substantial indirect environmental effects, such as increased commuting and air pollution.
The letter was issued to some 100 state departments/agencies demanding an environmental impact review of the RTO be done, Merced Sun Star reported.
The letter said departments adopting the RTO for employees back to the office âfour days per week is a discretionary decision that will have myriad environmental impacts that must be analyzed, disclosed, and mitigated.â
The union claimed that CEQA demands that a review be done before the RTO can be adopted and made it crystal clear that the union will move forward with legal challenges if that doesnât happen.
âIf Agency/Department refuses to conduct CEQA review prior to implementing its RTO policy, then CASE reserves the right to seek a writ of mandate in California Superior Court,â the letter read.
Matthew Gauger, CASEâs vice president, told the outlet that they expect the letters âto be very successful.â
âPutting 90,000 people on the road and pumping that much carbon into the air has an environmental impact,â he said.
âIt should only be done if thereâs a proper environmental impact report, and that hasnât been done.â
The letter included facts from the state auditor report from 2025, that claimed teleworking saved ânearly 50 million commute miles and avoided over 18,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) in just the month of December 2023.â
CASE demands that not only the environmental review be done on the impacts to human health and the climate, but also that âfeasible alternatives and mitigation measuresâ be found to reduce these greenhouse gases.
These feasible alternatives include âpersonnel to continue to telework, and thereby avoid thousands” of these emissions.
Because CASE said “it has worked for six years since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.”
Other options would include that the state âprovide public transit passes at reduced or no cost, provide electric car charging, provide electric van pools, or provide financial incentives for purchasing electric vehicles.â
The Post reached out to CASE for further comment.Â
CalHR sent a statement to The Post that Newsomâs order ârequiring state employees to return to the office four days per week remains in effect starting July 1, 2026, in alignment with agreements made last year to delay implementation by one year.â
âDepartments have been preparing for employeesâ return to the office in alignment with this directive, including assessing and adjusting workspace needs, where needed, for returning employees.â
Last year, Newsom faced push back from unions over Executive Order N-22-25 and itâs happening again.
Unions like SEIU Local 1000 â which represents nearly 100,000 state workers, and CAPS UAW, representing 6,000 scientific workers for the state â have blasted the governor over the move.
Newsom first issued an order in 2024 requiring two days of in-person work, a policy that was later expanded to four days a week.
