The Latest

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    Despite workforce churn in 2025, employers may not be replacing roles

    Workers are also job hugging and sticking around longer, though that may shift in 2026, iHire said in its report.

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    The one thing that makes workers excited about AI, according to researchers

    An Edelman survey found workers in China and Brazil feel very differently about the technology than those in the U.S., U.K. and Germany.

  • A laptop screen shows the word "ChatGPT" and three columns of blurred-out text
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    Leon Neal via Getty Images
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    AI use is ‘happening in silence’ amid lack of training, survey finds

    Nearly two-thirds of U.S. workers say their organizations encourage them to use AI at work, yet a third of those workers don’t receive training.

  • A sign marks the location of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's Local Office in Savannah, Georgia on September 17, 2022.
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    Ryan Golden/HR Dive
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    Deep Dive

    ‘Expect the unexpected’ in EEOC’s new era, attorneys say

    Management-side counsel anticipate clashes on pronoun use, bathroom policies, mentorship programs and other workplace issues.

  • U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
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    Caroline Colvin/HR Dive
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    Company pays $2M to settle claims it mistreated HR director for hiring women

    Glunt Industries also replaced the director’s female hires with men, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleged.

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    Zach Gibson via Getty Images
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    IRS’ temporary relief grants more workers eligibility under Trump’s ‘no tax on tips’ law

    The new guidance grants employees and employers “transition relief” until Jan. 1 of the first calendar year after final rules are issued to determine if they fall under a category for exemptions.

  • A home health aide assists a man.
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    Number of full-time working caregivers has increased by double digits, report finds

    At the same time, more women are leaving full-time work due to caregiving demands, Guardian said.

  • Three people sitting on a beach
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    Spencer Platt via Getty Images
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    Column // Happy Hour

    Unused PTO? There’s a beach for that.

    One tourism organization is urging workers to find work-life balance on the shores of the Gulf Coast.

  • University of pennsylvania campus
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    aimintang via Getty Images
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    EEOC asks court to force Penn response in antisemitism probe

    The university allegedly failed to comply with a September deadline to produce requested information, a claim denied by a spokesperson.

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    Arturo Holmes / Staff via Getty Images
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    Opinion

    Have employees in multiple states? Avoid a PTO quagmire by planning ahead.

    Among other things, HR should stay on top of employees’ locations and the laws governing those states, writes Catherine Strauss, partner at law firm Ice Miller.

  • SCOTUS Chevron deference, Corner Post
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    Kevin Dietsch / Staff via Getty Images
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    Bipartisan voices urge SCOTUS to uphold precedent outlawing agency firings

    While some conservative groups have pushed for more executive power, many other conservatives — including former judges, lawmakers and governors — have pushed back against the idea.

  • AI apps ChatGPT, Gemini, Copilot, Claude and Perplexity on a smartphone hovering over a computer keyboard .
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    US workers report a ‘major AI trust gap’ that affects their view of companies

    Half of workers said they prefer humans to review job applications, evaluate work performance and make decisions that affect careers, SHL survey results said.

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    Chip Somodevilla via Getty Images
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    Delayed September job numbers paint an optimistic picture amid murkier October

    “As hiring remains tepid and job growth hovers near stall speed, the labor market appears stuck in a holding pattern,” one ZipRecruiter economist said.

  • The sign reads "SIN IMMIGRANTES / NO HAY FUTURO" which means "WITHOUT IMMIGRATIONS, THERE IS NO FUTURE."
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    Scott Olson via Getty Images
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    EEOC hints at 2026 priorities with national origin bias guidance

    The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission continues to emphasize anti-American bias, publishing a technical assistance document tying it to potential Title VII violations.

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    Kate Tornone/HR Dive
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    6 stories from the ABA’s employment law conference

    Attorneys discussed this year’s hot topics — most notably, how to respond to the White House’s crackdown on “illegal” DEI.

  • Two women on a construction jobsite walk away from the camera.
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    Woman welder’s workplace murder prompts calls for change

    The killing of 20-year-old welder Amber Czech in Minnesota has spurred trade groups to advocate for better protections for women and transparency in harassment reporting.

  • A 'Join Our Team' sign is posted outside a coffee shop.
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    Mario Tama / Staff via Getty Images
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    This week in 5 numbers: Job openings up, but hires down

    Here’s a roundup of numbers from the last week of HR news — including how many daily generative artificial intelligence users said they were more productive from using the technology.

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    Bill Pugliano via Getty Images
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    8 in 10 companies will award executives bonuses this year, survey finds

    Meanwhile, nearly a third of companies plan to lay off workers before the end of the year, per the Resume.org survey.

  • Stock image showing a mature man’s face looking into a large computer screen as type is being added to the screen by an artificial intelligence chatbot.
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    The ‘AI race’ has fostered better hiring decisions — and mistrust, survey finds

    Hiring managers are conducting more in-person interviews to weed out fakes, while recruiters suspect their systems may be rejecting qualified candidates, according to a Greenhouse report.

  • An intern and technicians examine coral at a coral restoration farm.
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    Joe Raedle / Staff via Getty Images
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    Online searches for apprenticeships more than doubled in the past five years, Indeed says

    The number of apprenticeship programs has grown in recent years, particularly in mechanics, electrical and manufacturing.

  • SEC logo in its Washington, DC headquarters
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    Anna Moneymaker via Getty Images
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    Executive pay stabilizes as boards shift to performance-based strategies

    While CEO pay jumped significantly in 2024, driven by market recovery and aggressive long-term incentive strategies, that growth is now cooling, Gallagher said.

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    Brian Tucker/HR Dive
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    Mailbag: Should we follow EEOC’s lead on gender identity policy?

    A University of Colorado Law School professor weighed in Friday at the American Bar Association’s annual labor and employment law conference.

  • Bottles of medications sit on shelves at a pharmacy.
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    Eric Thayer / Stringer via Getty Images
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    Employers, workers to face healthcare ‘affordability crunch,’ Mercer warns

    A “sharp growth” in prescription drug spending, including pricey GLP-1 weight-loss medications, helped fuel the increase.

  • A man and woman walking towards the opposite directions of arrows in front of a red wall.
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    Column

    DEI divide: Where do we go from here?

    Recent SHRM moves and related research may hold answers about the future of DEI.

  • A stack of programs for the ABA's conference sits on a table.
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    Kate Tornone/HR Dive
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    Pay equity, barrier analysis remain ‘very legal’ ways to advance DEI, experts say

    As DEI is increasingly politicized, HR still has some low-hanging fruit available.