The Latest
-
Share your perspective in our 2026 Identity of HR survey
HR Dive would like your insight on the state of the profession and your priorities for the future.
-
Sponsored by ADP
HR compliance has outgrown fragmented tools. It needs an operating system.
Compliance work is constant. Fragmented tools make it harder than it needs to be.
-
Democratic lawmakers propose anti-harassment bill after EEOC scraps guidance
The Be Heard Act includes provisions to end mandatory arbitration and extend time limits for reporting harassment, among other reforms.
-
Week in review: Black women saw greater employment losses than most
We’re rounding up last week’s stories, from “workslop” to why IT workers need so much upskilling.
-
Amazon hiring ‘workstyle’ assessment may have been lie detector test, judge says
An applicant plausibly alleged that a test meant to gauge his “workstyle” fit the definition of a lie detector test under Massachusetts law, the judge determined.
-
Google fired pregnant engineer who took FMLA leave, lawsuit claims
A manager’s actions following two separate pregnancy disclosures allegedly amounted to unlawful discrimination on the basis of sex, pregnancy and disability.
-
Is ‘workslop’ becoming more accepted in the workplace?
Correcting AI-generated errors is “a new and often invisible burden at work,” according to a report from Zety.
-
Cost-per-hire and cost-per-application rose sharply in 2025, report says
The Appcast benchmark report attributed rising cost-per-application and cost-per-hire rates to “shifts in job board pricing and programmatic media models.”
-
Coca-Cola bottler excluded men from work trip, violating Title VII, EEOC alleges
The lawsuit filing comes on the heels of employment attorneys predicting that “reverse discrimination” would be an EEOC priority for 2026.
Updated Feb. 20, 2026 -
This week in 5 numbers: Most workers like learning from other generations
Here’s a roundup of numbers from the last week of HR news — including how much Black women’s employment dropped last year.
-
5 stories on the worker retirement problem
Workers do not feel confident in their ability to retire comfortably, recent reports show.
-
Gen X may be pivotal in bridging generations at work
The Mather Institute report found that the generations are more alike than stereotypes may suggest, particularly around technology adoption.
-
Skills are evolving too quickly for current training cycles, report says
Among IT workers, core responsibilities shift every 18 months, but learning was still seen as a benefit rather than an operational necessity, according to Info-Tech.
-
DOL offers $145M in grants for apprenticeship incentive program
The awards are tied to a pay-for-performance model to hold businesses and workers accountable. The funds also align with the White House’s goal to reach more than 1 million apprenticeships nationwide.
-
Jury may decide whether homecare company owes nearly $6M in overtime
The U.S. Department of Labor alleged the employer intentionally misclassified employees as independent contractors to avoid paying overtime.
-
5 stories on alleged discrimination against men
Title VII applies to all workers, regardless of their sex, race or other protected characteristics — and recent events have put the spotlight on majority-group plaintiffs.
-
Opinion
Amid the DEI crisis, here’s how HR can build a talent strategy that weathers the storm
Crisis management professional Bradley Akubuiro offers advice to HR professionals tasked with creating an inclusive workplace while navigating a volatile DEI landscape.
-
DOL’s AI literacy framework encourages experiential learning and ‘human’ skills
A lack of proper training has remained one of the bigger sticking points for employers adopting AI technology.
-
Most CFOs say they expect larger IT budgets but ‘collapsing’ staff growth
This shift marks a pivot toward automation and “labor optimization” to drive productivity rather than headcount increases, one senior analyst said.
-
Cemetery locked Black employees out of restroom open to White workers, EEOC alleges
The alleged conduct amounted to an unlawful denial of equal status in the workplace, the commission said.
-
Column
Want a bigger raise? Don’t be a long-tenured CEO
Bank of America’s $41 million payday for Brian Moynihan shows two trends: Newer big-bank CEOs received larger raises. And Moynihan’s 2025 compensation may have been held back by a comparatively better 2024.
-
SHRM: Year-round upskilling opportunities tied to ‘significantly’ higher engagement
Employees who had such opportunities also reported higher job satisfaction and loyalty.
-
Black women employment sees one of its sharpest annual declines in past 25 years
The months ahead might provide clearer answers as to whether the losses were “casualties of anti-equity backlash in action,” EPI researchers said.
-
Week in review: Outdated hiring practices are stifling HR
We're rounding up last week’s stories, from skills gaps getting more pronounced to dropping demand for HR professionals.
-
Driver’s heart condition not a disability under the ADA, 8th Circuit affirms
The case is a reminder of the contours of the law’s disability definition.
-
The image by Jmh485 is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0
Resistance to management style didn’t create hostile work environment, court finds
The court said that the direct report’s responses were not discriminatory microaggressions, but rather “innocent workplace misunderstandings.”