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Office workers, students struggle to return to in-person life as 'living with COVID-19' kicks off

A subway stop for Seoul Station is busy with commuters in the morning on Monday, the first day South Korea's
A subway stop for Seoul Station is busy with commuters in the morning on Monday, the first day South Korea's "living with COVID-19" scheme went into effect. (Yonhap)
City centers in Seoul welcomed back the return of rush hour crowds Monday morning as office workers and students resumed their in-person lives under the government's "living with COVID-19" scheme aimed at bringing the nation gradually back to pre-pandemic normalcy.

South Korea activated on Monday the first of the three-stage scheme to gradually phase out coronavirus restrictions as more than 70 percent of the population have been fully vaccinated.

Under the latest measure effective for four weeks, operation hour curfews on cafes, restaurants and other businesses were fully lifted, except for nightlife establishments, while the private gathering limit was raised to 10 people for the greater Seoul area.

Working from home, recommended for 30 percent of the workforce at companies outside the manufacturing sector under the previous Level 4 social distancing in the greater Seoul area, is no longer advised, while schools will be allowed to fully open their doors to students on Nov. 22, following a state-run university entrance exam the previous week.

Major public transportation services in the capital were inundated with commuters and students returning to workplaces and schools, respectively, beginning early in the morning.

"It is both awkward and exciting to go to the office to work for the first time," said a 29-year-old office worker surnamed Kim, who had worked from home since landing the current job in Seoul in June. "I feel I am a real office worker now that I can work and communicate alongside my co-workers."

A Twitter user with the account "@vari********" uploaded a photo indicating more than 80 morning coffee grabbers were waiting in line at a Starbucks store in the morning. "It seems everyone has come back from working from home," the Twitter user commented.

Others remain worried about a possible flare-up of infections due to the eased virus curbs. Many office workers also complained about the hassle of having to again go through rush hour, as well as the apparent resumption of overtime company dinner meetings, a typical routine in the Korean corporate culture.

"I don't understand at all why infectious disease prevention measures had to be eased at a time social distancing still remains a far cry on public transportation services during the rush hours," Cho Seong-bin, a high school sophomore in Seoul, told Yonhap News Agency. 

An office worker surnamed Park said he is worried, thinking about the resumption of the "inefficient" in-person office life.

"I have been very happy working from home, without having to be face to face with my boss every day and getting to spend time for my health and personal advancement," said the office worker who commutes from Incheon, 40 kilometers west of Seoul, to the capital's financial district of Yeouido.

A 48-year-old office worker, surnamed Chang, echoed the point.

"I feel already tired when thinking of the resumption of a life without evening rest because of the busy corporate life, especially corporate dinner meetings."

Through the second  and third phase of "living with COVID-19," expected to be effective in December and January, the country will eventually roll back all business curfews and gathering limits.

Health authorities have warned there could be sudden surges of daily virus cases during the process. The normalization process will be temporarily put on hold and a contingency virus prevention plan will take over if the country's COVID-19 caseload reaches a crisis level, the government said. (Yonhap)
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