The Vatican is under pressure to let more employees work from home as its offices remain open two weeks after the Italian government ordered Italians home and shut down all non-essential businesses in an urgent attempt to contain the coronavirus.
Vatican employees in three different offices expressed alarm Tuesday that superiors had adopted different policies about working from home, forcing some to continue showing up. Concern about risk of exposure has been heightened because many Vatican employees live in priests' residences or religious communities and eat together in communal dining rooms.
Two religious orders in Rome have already been quarantined after several sisters tested positive for the virus. On Tuesday, Rome's health service sent its crisis unit to a nursing home run by an order of nuns after several elderly residents got infected. Nationwide, more than 50 priests with the virus have died, most of them elderly and from the hard-hit northern Lombardy region, the Italian bishops' conference said.
Vatican offices that handle particularly sensitive issues - such as the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith - told employees to show up five days a week to prevent documents, files and archives from leaving the office, according to one employee, speaking on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to officially speak to the media.
Officials at the Vatican office that oversees the church's work in the developing world, known as Propaganda Fide, still require employees to come in at least twice a week. The requirement means staff members who live outside of central Rome must commute using public transportation, said Karlijn Demasure, whose husband works in the mission office.
The whole of Italy closes down but not so the Vatican, at least not Propaganda Fide, Demasure wrote on Facebook. It is dangerous, moving between cities, trains, metro and buses. I cannot believe that this is actually happening! On Tuesday, the Vatican repeated that its offices would remain open.
It said individual department heads should arrange for essential services" to be provided to the church with the minimal personnel on hand and incentivizing as much as possible remote working."
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