I've been in the workplace longer than Mtnbkr.
More importantly, I've been in the workplace where words are king -- newspapers, American Rifleman magazine, advertising, and for the last nearly 20 years, software, system, and process documentation.
I'm going to agree with him. I literally cannot remember the last time I saw cursive in the workplace, especially not where I've been for the last 18.5 years.
Many people take notes for themselves in notebooks during meetings, and many of those notes are, I would suspect, in cursive. I'd bet an equal number are printed.
But no one, and I mean no one, writes at a professional level in cursive where I work. We're a technical company. People are used to technology, and many of them are scientists, engineers and the like, and for them printing was probably more common than writing for sheer clarity on things like lab reports.
The last time I remember seeing cursive used regularly was when I was with Navy Federal Credit Union in the mid 1990s. We routed mockups in folders with routing lists, and several people almost always wrote notes in the circulation folder in cursive. They had absolutely gorgeous Palmer styles that was perfectly legible. They were also all older, having gone to school in probably the late 1940s/early 1950s. Everyone else printed.
Email and text have virtually replaced handwritten notes. Voice mails. A quick jot on a post it is probably the most people handwrite in a week.