The Latest
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Title VII plaintiffs don’t need to mitigate emotional distress damages, 5th Circuit says
No such requirement exists in the law’s statute, the court held, rejecting an argument advanced by SkyWest Airlines in a former employee’s harassment lawsuit.
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Sponsored by Safeguard Global
Today’s workforce planning question: Where (not whom) should we hire?
The real bottleneck isn't a lack of information; it's a lack of a credible starting point.
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Tampa employee of Cuban origin wasn’t subjected to unlawful harassment, court rules
The alleged incidents were sporadic, contained no racial or ethnic slurs, and for the most part, made no express reference to Hispanics.
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The economy is shutting young adults out of career-entry jobs, analysis finds
Artificial intelligence matters, but in a “narrow, early and age-specific way,” researchers at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis said.
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AI skills now listed in 73% of tech job postings
Highly regulated industries working to shape their AI implementation plans outpace other industries in the search for talent, according to Dice.
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DC Water to pay roughly $217,000 to settle claim it replaced HR worker with younger employee
The District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority must also enhance its nondiscrimination policies and provide advanced antidiscrimination training.
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This week in 5 numbers: Nearly 4 in 10 workers don’t trust HR to help in toxic situations
Here’s a roundup of numbers from the last week — including how many workers were targeted in job scam attempts.
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Men outearn women by more than $12K annually, data shows
“As more women joined the full-time workforce, the per-worker difference compounded into a much larger estimated overall gap,” a career expert said.
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SHRM26
On its 60th birthday, SHRM’s nonprofit arm pushes for better caregiver support
Employers can’t reliably address working caregivers’ needs through policies and employee benefits alone, said Wendi Safstrom, president of the SHRM Foundation.
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WorkSmart settles EEOC claim it failed to hire, refer women per a client request
Staffing agencies have repeatedly drawn the agency’s attention for allegedly discriminating based on protected characteristics to satisfy the demands of a client.
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PIP’s proximity to plaintiff’s EEOC charge can’t save bias complaint, 3rd Circuit says
A Black former BNY employee failed to show that his placement on a performance improvement plan was the result of race-based discrimination.
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Nearly 7 in 10 workers say they didn’t get a raise in the past 6 months
Increased transparency about pay and workforce decisions can improve the perception gap between employers and employees, Morgan McKinley found.
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Edward Jones pushes back on lawsuit challenging diversity program
The employer critiqued the plaintiff’s attempt to form a class of “all White” advisors while simultaneously alleging White women benefited from the program.
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US labor market continues to be ‘low hire, low fire’
Current trends indicate slower job growth ahead as an increasing number of consumers say they’re having trouble finding jobs.
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Job scams leave recruiters competing with fakes
The most common methods of contact include email, text and “unsolicited recruiter outreach,” with job boards and networking platforms not far behind.
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CEOs fear they’re underinvesting in AI
More than half of chief executives are concerned their businesses will fall behind due to limitations in technology foundations, according to a new survey.
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Which skills will matter the most in the next five years?
Recruiters reported “notable shortages” in skills related to AI capabilities, grit, emotional intelligence and managing workers, according to GMAC.
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2026 tech layoffs: US leads in head count reduction
Role eliminations at cloud computing companies, especially Oracle, comprise the lion’s share of 2026 tech layoffs.
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Leaders say studying abroad improved their skills
The vast majority of respondents in a survey said that their international education strengthened their strategic thinking skills and positively affected their careers.
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Microsoft scrambles to secure AI talent, guts Xbox workforce
The tech giant aims to deploy 6,000 industry and engineering experts as part of the Microsoft Frontier Co. initiative launched last week.
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Feds to target tip credits, child labor, EEO-1 reports and more in new rules
The announcements are part of the Trump administration’s broader push to reshape federal employment law compliance.
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Former EEOC commissioner drops lawsuit after SCOTUS ruling
Both Jocelyn Samuels and dissenting Justice Sonia Sotomayor warned of the power consolidating itself in the executive branch.
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Harley-Davidson retaliated against manager for protesting DEI rollback, lawsuit alleges
The motorcycle company allegedly changed her title, prohibited her from attending external diversity events and removed her from a mentoring program.
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Disparate impact liability rollback advances with DOL rule on federal funding access
The change comports with similar Trump administration efforts and is aimed at aligning with the “original public meaning” of Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, DOL said.
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Employees blame leadership for toxic workplaces
Nearly half of workers surveyed said they didn’t trust HR or leadership to help if they were to report a toxic situation.
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Week in review: A 91-year-old standard falls at SCOTUS
We’re rounding up last week’s top stories, including EEOC’s about-face on affirmative action and why recruiting is now AI versus AI.