The Latest

  • A medical professional tends to a person on a stretcher.
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    Mario Tama / Staff via Getty Images
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    US health spending spikes to $5.7T in 2025, though growth should moderate, CMS finds

    Utilization — not cost growth — continues to accelerate spending, government actuaries said. Spiking prescription drug spending, including on GLP-1s, is especially acute.

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    Permission granted by Michael Kunde / Kaiser Permanente
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    Sponsored by Kaiser Permanente

    How to keep health care costs predictable

    Kaiser Permanente’s integrated care and coverage make health care costs more predictable.

  • The silhouettes of individuals are seen standing in a line in front of a window at a job fair.
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    Joe Raedle / Staff via Getty Images
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    Broken recruiting processes block AI gains, survey shows

    Fragmented systems, isolated tools and siloed data are partly to blame, research from ManpowerGroup Talent Solutions and Everest Group said.

  • A man in a purple suit and tie sits in front of a federal emblem
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    Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images via Getty Images
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    FCC Chairman says there is ‘common ground’ on ending illegal discrimination, DEI

    In May, 18 members of Congress sent a letter questioning the agency’s targeting of companies’ DEI policies.

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    Mario Tama/Getty Images via Getty Images
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    Opinion

    What it takes to lead a dispersed front-line workforce

    For organizations with many hourly, distributed employees, workers must feel seen, heard and empowered to act with confidence, writes the CHRO of Fidium. 

  • SHRM26

    DEI’s next era? Reorientation, says SHRM’s Johnny Taylor Jr.

    In conversation with HR Dive, SHRM’s president and CEO forecasted the future of DEI in 2027 and 2028.

  • SHRM logo for SHRM26 in Orlando, Florida
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    Ryan Golden/HR Dive
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    SHRM26

    AI may miss hidden talent. Recruiters can take steps to prevent that from happening.

    Employers must design AI systems that recognize nontraditional job candidates’ experience and credentials, a SHRM26 speaker said.

  • A sign of the logo of Bold Limited brand Monster.com in front an office in Brno, Czech Republic
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    BalkansCat via Getty Images
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    Monster’s parent company rebuffs competitor’s ‘deficient’ antitrust lawsuit

    Bold Limited said Rocket Resume’s lawsuit alleging that it monopolized the market for resume-building platforms “fails at every step.”

  • An aerial view of Workday headquarters on February 6, 2025 in Pleasanton, California.
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    Justin Sullivan / Staff via Getty Images
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    Workday can’t shake California AI discrimination claims

    Because Workday is headquartered in California, a “sufficient nexus” exists to apply the state law even to nonresidents, a federal judge determined.

  • Clothing Store: Businesswoman Uses Tablet Computer, Talks to Visual Merchandising Specialist, Collaborate To Create Stylish Collection. Small Business Fashion Shop Sales Manager Talks to Designer.
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    Getty Images
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    Younger workers may be falling behind in critical thinking skills

    The three largest skill gaps in the younger workforce represent “the very skills most essential to humans in the AI era,” per a report from Cangrade.

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    Caroline Colvin/HR Dive
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    EEOC opens antisemitism probe into NEA, Brandeis Center says

    The center’s complaint alleges the teachers union didn’t specify Jews as the primary victims of the Holocaust, among other things.

  • A sea of graduation caps is seen as students listen to a commencement address.
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    Dimitrios Kambouris / Staff via Getty Images
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    7 stories on new and recent grads in the labor market

    Generation Z interns are increasingly citing old-school, hands-on experiences as among the most valuable workplace exposures they can have. 

  • The word "courage" flashes on stage as SHRM's Johnny Taylor speaks at SHRM26 in Orlando, Fla.
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    Ryan Golden/HR Dive
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    SHRM26

    SHRM CEO: HR faces ‘extinction’ and has ‘lost the plot’ on the future of work

    The new CHRO, dubbed the Chief Work Officer, will juggle robots, AI and humans and — above all — take back the profession from those who don’t see its value, Johnny Taylor said.

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    John Moore via Getty Images
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    Q&A

    Onboarding begins even before a candidate’s first interview, one HR pro says

    Lindsay Gainor, a vice president of HR at ServiceMaster Brands, shares onboarding tips to help ensure new hires stay past the one-year mark. 

  • A person types on a computer in a home office.
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    Sean Gallup / Staff via Getty Images
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    Remote workers represent ‘a disproportionate share’ of unemployed adults, Gallup says

    While artificial intelligence wasn’t cited as the reason for layoffs, its impact was often evident in more subtle ways, the report noted.

  • A person pauses before entering the action of SHRM 2026 in Orlando, Florida.
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    Caroline Colvin / HR Dive/HR Dive
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    SHRM26

    SHRM’s Alex Alonso believes human skills have a place in the future of work

    The SHRM26 annual conference gave HR professionals a wealth of AI advice, including insight on what roles humans play going forward.

  • A crowd walks through a convention center, seen from a high vantage point.
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    Ryan Golden/HR Dive
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    SHRM26

    In the AI age, how can HR stay human?

    Instead of artificial intelligence, HR pros should focus on “authentic intelligence” — human intuition, in other words, author and leadership expert Alison Jones said.

  • The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco, California.
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    Justin Sullivan via Getty Images
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    9th Circuit reverses sexual orientation bias ruling in favor of Christian ministry

    A dissenting judge wrote that the decision represented part of a “disturbing path” with respect to religious freedom protections.

  • Two six packs of Bud Light and Michelob Ultra are next to each other on a store shelf.
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    Justin Sullivan via Getty Images
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    4th Circuit strips class certification in Anheuser-Busch lawsuit, finding members too different

    Evidence showed prospective class members performed substantially different tasks and were subject to different legal standards, the court said.

  • SHRM and BambooHR logo for SHRM26 in Orlando, Florida
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    Ryan Golden/HR Dive
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    SHRM26

    ‘Don’t be scared. Be prepared’: 6 steps for preventing workplace violence

    It's difficult for HR to grapple with the possibility of workplace violence. But specific, written plans and accessible policies are key to addressing that risk, a SHRM26 panel said.

  • SHRM logo for SHRM26 in Orlando, Florida
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    Ryan Golden/HR Dive
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    SHRM26

    5 insights SHRM26 speakers shared about AI

    HR should remember that anxiety and fear about artificial intelligence are fundamentally human emotions, said author Simon Sinek.

  • SHRM26 attendees walking through Orange County Convention Center in Orlando
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    Ryan Golden/HR Dive
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    SHRM26

    SHRM members ‘struggling’ to fund GLP-1 drugs, pulling back on mental health benefits

    However, the HR organization’s latest annual employee benefits survey also revealed greater investment in menopause- and pet-related benefits, analysts said at SHRM26.

  • A backlit silhouette of a student wearing a cap and gown
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    Dan Kitwood via Getty Images
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    Week in review: New grads want growth opportunities at work

    We’re rounding up last week’s stories, from the continued growth in the tech sector to what HR can do in the wake of world crises.

  • a storefront bearing Walmart signage in blue and yellow
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    Brandon Bell via Getty Images
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    Walmart hit with $23M jury verdict after retaliation trial

    A worker who was fired shortly after reporting a supervisor for her failure to act on sexual harassment complaints alleged she experienced retaliation.

    Updated 29 minutes ago
  • A sign that says SHRM in different colors.
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    Ryan Golden/HR Dive
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    SHRM26

    A top-down commitment is crucial for inclusion in 2026, SHRM panelists say

    Members of SHRM’s I&D council presented a road map for creating diversity and inclusion at work while being mindful of the compliance landscape.

  • Nurses wearing surgical masks look at a computer in a hospital
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    Win McNamee via Getty Images
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    Thinking about cutting worker benefits to save money? Not so fast, expert warns.

    “Maybe the juice isn’t worth the squeeze,” a senior consultant and actuary at Mercer said.