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Mike Quine, right, vice president of RLI Corp., wears shorts and sandals recentlyto a meeting. Quine decided to let employees wear shorts this summer whenthe temperature reaches at least 90.
Mike Quine, right, vice president of RLI Corp., wears shorts and sandals recentlyto a meeting. Quine decided to let employees wear shorts this summer whenthe temperature reaches at least 90.
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Getting your player ready...

Just as one of the hottest summers in years started to sizzle, a Peoria, Ill.-based insurer took a bold step for a conservative company in a staid industry: It let its employees wear shorts to the office.

Not just any shorts on any day, mind you. They must be the type worn to church or the boss’ barbecue, according to RLI Corp. vice president Mike Quine, and the temperature has to be at least 90 degrees.

“It creates a little different kind of culture,” said Quine, whose “Condition 90” memo in June proved one of his most popular ever with employees. “It makes people more relaxed.”

During heat waves at least, shorts in the office are the new frontier of business casual, the relaxed style of garb that began often substituting for suits and ties in the late ’80s and early ’90s.

While Fortune 500 corporations are sticking with the long-pants look, some smaller firms across the country have loosened their policies to the point where what once was appropriate for the beach or the ballpark now works in the office too.

“Work can be challenging enough without oppressive heat and humidity,” explained spokesman Kevin Dugan of Cincinnati-based FRCH Design Worldwide, an architecture and design firm whose 175 employees are encouraged to wear shorts on particularly sweltering days.

In a true sign of dresswear-decadent times, a few firms have even instituted Flip-Flop Fridays. Garden of Life, a nutritional supplements maker based in West Palm Beach, Fla., lets its 160 employees wear shorts and flip-flops on summer Fridays for a $10 donation to charity that is matched by the company.

But beware where you wear those shorts – some business etiquette experts say they can easily send the wrong message.

“I tend to think shorts are too casual,” said Peter Handal, chief executive of Dale Carnegie Training, a Hauppage, N.Y.-based firm that trains corporations in management and workplace issues. “That’s just not businesslike.”

The most casual that Handal ever dresses at work is khakis and a shirt with a collar and no tie. In any case, shorts and tank tops are hardly necessary in an air-conditioned office, he noted. “If you want to come to work in a T-shirt because it’s ungodly hot, then you just put on another shirt when you get there.”

Despite the approval of shorts at a few companies, the overall trend toward casual attire may be slowing down. More employers have drawn up formal dress codes to ensure that workers don’t push relaxed standards too far, and recent surveys show a desire among employers to see the workforce adopt more conservative fashions.

Handal sees evidence that companies are actually getting dressier in the past couple of years, with Fortune 500 and other large firms becoming more formal in their business dress.

Similarly, business etiquette expert Lydia Ramsey has noticed a swing back toward business professional attire and away from business casual among the companies that hire her because ultra-casual creates sticky issues. The problem, she said, is “a lot of skin” – a loosening of standards that extends all the way to men showing chest hair and women showing cleavage, with sandals and flip-flops galore.

“In the last few years in the summertime, people really do let go,” said Ramsey, who owns the firm Manners That Sell in Savannah, Ga. “Some companies are really trying to go back in the other direction” because their clients aren’t comfortable with it.

But the bounds of what is professional dress are a bit fuzzy these days.

“It’s a real touchy issue to call someone into the office and try to tell someone that they aren’t dressed properly,” Ramsey said. “No one wants to do that.”

RLI, a property-casualty insurer with $584 million in revenue last year, only switched away from coat-and-tie to business casual five years ago. Noticing improved morale, Quine now makes sure the 350 headquarters employees are reminded in the daily company e-mail that they can wear shorts and sandals or Birkenstocks – no rubber flip-flops, please – the next day if it’s going to be 90 degrees outside.

The company didn’t want employees wearing shorts every day for reasons of professional appearance, he said. But little did Quine know the area would experience about two dozen workdays above that temperature this summer.

“It seemed like a good idea at the time,” he said with a laugh.

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