sunny 2007-5-28 03:23 PM
Employee Mobility: Popped by the Housing Bubble
Corporations are struggling to deal with a prolonged U.S. housing slump that has left relocation programs stuck with high-priced homes purchased from employees who have been moved to new locations. Dealing with the weak U.S. housing market has become the top priority for most corporate relocation officers. { zbi,cXoE\
[b]By Irwin Speizer[/b] [font=times new roman][size=3][font=times new roman][size=3][img]http://www.workforce.com/images/drp/drp_a.gif[/img]s manager of relocation services for Minneapolis-based medical device company Medtronic Inc., Jeannie Comer oversees some 1,000 employee moves each year. Most years, the company has about five unsold homes in its inventory at any given time as a result of those moves. These days, she’s struggling to unload an average of 30 homes at a time. "I would say during the last year that I am spending 25 percent more of my time managing the inventory of homes," Comer says./w7Y*y,b8L.i Z\O
Medtronic is hardly unique as corporations struggle to deal with a prolonged U.S. housing slump that has left relocation programs stuck with high-priced homes purchased from employees who have been moved to new locations. Dealing with the weak U.S. housing market has become the top priority for most corporate relocation officers.
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While some companies have come up with creative ways of handling a growing inventory of unsold homes, there is apparently little attempt to curb relocation programs. The reason: A tight labor market makes it increasingly important for companies to get the right workers in the right locations, and that goal trumps relocation cost containment at the moment.