Human Resource Management and Institutional Resilience during the COVID-19 Pandemic—A Case Study from the Westfjords of Iceland
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- How well were private and public institutions in small and remote coastal communities prepared for the COVID-19 pandemic?
- What were the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on daily operations?
- What solutions emerged in response to the COVID-19 pandemic?
- What type of learning and growth potential can be drawn from the COVID-19 pandemic?
2. Theoretical Model
3. Methods
4. Results
4.1. Anticipate and Plan
4.1.1. Lack of Preparedness
And of course, we have a nursing home and two people died in the nursing home in the first wave of infections. So, it had a huge impact. Both organizationally and response wise, because there was no plan in place of how to respond to this. No one knew what they were actually doing.(01)
We have stress because you never know what the next day will bring. You never know what will be next, like what the set of rules will be…you have no long-term strategy. We’re always kind of in a very passive role, just waiting for things to happen and just reacting, we were not able to do anything proactively.(32)
4.1.2. Preparedness
It’s flooding, it is earthquakes, volcanoes, avalanches. We are used to dealing with the natural forces. Being lost at sea, all kinds of things.(37)
For example, going to the store, people stock up. Nothing was different because we always have to have a week of supplies.(30)
Completely disorganized and is not specified in any rules and completely unclear what the effect is, good or bad or what. But you just make decisions like that. And I made a lot of decisions like that.(01)
4.2. Manage and Survive
4.2.1. Changes in Work Patterns
At that time, my daughter was working here in a store and she said, the young people never cause trouble, but the old people, we got to hear it from the old people.(06)
4.2.2. Managing and Preventing Outbreaks
But even though there was an infected person on board the ship, the shipping company or crew took full responsibility for it and isolated people and placed them in quarantine. Everyone at the shipping company had such a tracker around their necks, so it was always possible to know who had been in contact with the person in question. And so, they managed to isolate this on board the ship and keep it isolated. This never had any effect on our operations. We have, in fact, new facilities. A border shed where the harbor guards are behind glass and the passengers walk back and forth freely.(31)
4.2.3. Wage Adjustments and Revenue Losses
We ticked all the right boxes. The revenue went down enough to make us fit in that scheme, maybe 50% of normal. [Many other companies in Ísafjörður] were able to get that support. We cut our salary during that time, but we managed to make the biggest investment that the company has made during that time. … We put it into a special account and managed to persuade the bank to provide the rest.(37)
4.2.4. School Management
We had all these measures. We had these little pink lines in the hallways marking different sections…like second year students can use the library and no one else can…distance learners will need to be studying downstairs.(39)
It was always changing week by week, and new decisions and then new decisions. So, undeniably, it created both this kind of fatigue and irritability, both in the staff group and the student group. Students were asking can we come to school? Shouldn’t we come to school?(39)
4.2.5. Staff Shortages
We once had to send children home because someone had to be quarantined. And then, of course, that meant that the department was understaffed.(34)
In the big fish factories, they bought thermometers to measure the temperature of the staff when they came in the mornings. And in the beginning, it was a bit controversial, that this was symbolic of how profit driven the companies were. That they did not intend to lose staff on sick leave.(41)
Over the winter it was quiet. You could say that we may have been too many. But then we were understaffed this summer. We did not expect anyone, we did not expect any cruise ships in the summer. So, we did not hire any summer replacements.(31)
4.3. Learn and Grow
4.3.1. Adjustments and Resulting Growth
There are large investments in the fishing industry in the town now…There has not been such a large upheaval and investment in Bolungarvík for 30 years. Somehow, we managed to change things, economically. Because there is no unemployment here. The largest increase in real estate prices in Iceland last year was in Bolungarvík. We saw the tax revenue…it increased incredibly much, even though the population numbers did not change.(01)
We succeeded, the fishing companies in the town managed to adapt very quickly. It just stopped for two weeks and then when it started again it had changed the packaging, changed the products that were being processed, and just got going again.(01)
4.3.2. Remote Work and Teleconferencing
So, I hope we have learned, even if only half of these conferences and meetings and seminars could be accessible through teleconferencing. If we would continue to do half in teleconferencing and do the rest so that we meet, it would be just victory and savings for the state and the nation.(11)
The university too I know already had that distance learning infrastructure in place, but the ability to reach students elsewhere, is probably a good thing in the long term.(12)
4.3.3. Improvements in Healthcare Services and the Unexpected Benefits of Sanitation Measures
The system was way too stiff, and I don’t blame anyone for not being prepared, but I was very sad to see that there was no response and adapting to the condition.(28)
I met a woman the other day who is working in the nursing home. And she was saying that they were in a bit of trouble because the residents there were not dying. Because there are so many people on the waiting list. After the pandemic we have a mask mandate, there is more cleaning and people are disinfecting everything. Then there is not as much illness coming into the nursing home.(03)
I think the restaurants in town have a lot more infrastructure to go and delivery orders. Now, the cafe that I worked at pre-pandemic had no delivery service and now has expanded to do delivery and online orders and catering events as well. So, they’re able to diversify their business model a little bit.(12)
5. Discussions
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Interview Protocol
- What are Arctic community experiences of public health measures during the COVID-19 pandemic?
- What coping strategies did Arctic communities engage in to adapt to the COVID-19 pandemic?
- What impacts did the pandemic have on foreign residents and immigrants in Iceland compared to native Icelandic citizens? Do their experiences differ?
- What can we learn from these community case studies to inform policy and program implementation now and in the future?
- Were you born in Iceland?
- If not, where were you born?
- How long have you been living in Iceland?
- How long have you been living in Westfjords?
- Is Icelandic your native language?
- If no, what is your native language?
- What is your role in the community (simple information)?
- 4.
- In two to three sentences, how has the pandemic affected you and your community/company?
- 5.
- Can you briefly describe the COVID-19 impact on your institution / job?
- 6.
- What happens in your community when there’s a regional/national mandate? Where do they come from? Do people listen?
- 7.
- Do you feel like the national Icelandic COVID-19 policies adequately addressed the needs of your local community/company?
- 8.
- What national COVID-19 policies do you believe were affective for your community/company?
- 9.
- Were any national COVID-19 policies unnecessary or unproductive in your opinion? If so, which ones and why?
- 10.
- In what ways has your community/company succeeded in keeping itself safe throughout the pandemic?
- 11.
- In which ways was your community/company already prepared for the pandemic before its arrival? For example, response plans, resources, routines etc. Where they sufficient?
- 12.
- Do you think your community/company responds well to regional/national mandates?
- 13.
- How do you feel about your community’s/company’s response time to the COVID-19 pandemic?
- 14.
- Where do people in your community/company get information about COVID-19?
- 15.
- Do you think your community/company has been more vulnerable to risks from the pandemic than other communities/companies? If so, in what ways?
- 16.
- In which ways do you think your community/company is more resilient to risks from the pandemic compared to other communities/companies?
- 17.
- What insights do you have about coping with quarantine/isolation? Did this impact you or your family personally? In that case, where there any activities, hobbies, or practices that helped you/your family cope with the added stress of the pandemic?
- 18.
- If you were required to go into isolation immediately, were you able to isolate yourself from other members of your household (including separate bathrooms) or did arrangements have to be made to accommodate your isolation?
- 19.
- What positive impacts has the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting quarantine had on your daily life?
- 20.
- What negative impacts has the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting quarantine had on your daily life?
- 21.
- If you had to self-isolate or quarantine, how would you describe your mental state during the situation?
- 22.
- Were you unemployed as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic?
- 23.
- If you are a student or teacher, how has the pandemic impacted your schooling, and how does it make you feel? (if not applicable, answer ‘does not apply’).
- 24.
- If you are working remotely, how has the pandemic impacted your work, and how does it make you feel? (if not applicable, answer ‘does not apply’).
- 25.
- How has the pandemic impacted your social life?
- 26.
- How has the pandemic impacted your leisure time activities?
- 27.
- How has the pandemic impacted your hopes and future goals?
- 28.
- Was it difficult for you to access information regarding the COVID-19 pandemic in your native language from Icelandic authorities?
- 29.
- Do you think social media is an effective tool in the response to the COVID-19 pandemic? Why or why not?
- 30.
- Has anything in your community/company improved as a direct or indirect result of the pandemic? If so, what?
- 31.
- If another pandemic were to occur in the future, what improvements should be made in your community’s/company’s response? What lessons should be learned?
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Jóhannsdóttir, L.; Cook, D.; Kendall, S.; Latapí, M.; Chambers, C. Human Resource Management and Institutional Resilience during the COVID-19 Pandemic—A Case Study from the Westfjords of Iceland. Sustainability 2022, 14, 16988. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142416988
Jóhannsdóttir L, Cook D, Kendall S, Latapí M, Chambers C. Human Resource Management and Institutional Resilience during the COVID-19 Pandemic—A Case Study from the Westfjords of Iceland. Sustainability. 2022; 14(24):16988. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142416988
Chicago/Turabian StyleJóhannsdóttir, Lára, David Cook, Sarah Kendall, Mauricio Latapí, and Catherine Chambers. 2022. "Human Resource Management and Institutional Resilience during the COVID-19 Pandemic—A Case Study from the Westfjords of Iceland" Sustainability 14, no. 24: 16988. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142416988
APA StyleJóhannsdóttir, L., Cook, D., Kendall, S., Latapí, M., & Chambers, C. (2022). Human Resource Management and Institutional Resilience during the COVID-19 Pandemic—A Case Study from the Westfjords of Iceland. Sustainability, 14(24), 16988. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142416988