The Latest
-
Screenshot: Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions/YouTube
EEOC gets court win in challenge over its treatment of trans bias claims
The ruling is a victory for Chair Andrea Lucas as she and the agency implement a key component of President Donald Trump’s workplace civil rights agenda.
-
Sponsored by Cartus
Why employee experience became mobility’s hardest metric
Employee experience has become central to relocation success and harder than ever to get right.
-
Amazon settles lawsuit alleging it asked for workers’ family medical histories
Illinois has especially strong legal protections governing workers’ bodily rights, with employers like Walmart and Topgolf also coming under fire under the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act.
-
Cybersecurity, data privacy and AI may leave employers legally exposed
“Even where federal enforcement has softened, states are often stepping in and pushing litigation forward,” Norton Rose Fulbright’s U.S. head of litigation and disputes said.
-
What does the class of 2026 want from their post-grad jobs?
Here’s what recent grads are looking for amid the job search, according to the National Association of Colleges and Employers.
-
Week in review: Is mandatory E-Verify inching closer?
We’re rounding up last week’s stories, from a state law prohibiting “ghost jobs” to the “joy paradox” of artificial intelligence.
-
The 2026 World Cup has arrived. Here are 3 things HR should do to prepare.
From traffic to watch parties, there’s much for employers to consider as one of the world’s biggest sporting events hits home.
-
Judge trims $83M from record-breaking age bias penalty imposed on Liberty Mutual
There was no evidence from which a jury could reasonably infer that Liberty Mutual acted with “intentional malice, trickery or deceit,” the judge said.
-
CHROs say hiring will home in on specific talent
Hiring confidence remains high despite ongoing challenges and a narrowing of recruiting scope, The Conference Board said.
-
Are L&D leaders stepping away from strategy discussions?
Employees tend to rely more on manager feedback than on traditional development frameworks when it comes to improving their skills, RedThread Research said.
-
Meta earmarks $115M for workforce academy to support data center construction
The program will provide free skilled-trades training, industry credentials and guaranteed jobs as the company expands its artificial intelligence infrastructure footprint.
-
20 attorneys general sue Trump administration over federal contractor DEI order
The plaintiffs argue Trump’s executive order impedes each state’s efforts and is unclear in what it prohibits.
-
This week in 5 numbers: Companies face potential fines for ‘ghost job’ postings
Here’s a roundup of numbers from the last week — including how many companies are experiencing impersonation attacks.
-
Some companies cover workers’ vacation costs
“It’s essential to have that break from work to avoid burnout. It’s essential for human wellness, employee wellness,” a career expert told HR Dive.
-
New York passes a bill aimed at halting ‘ghost jobs’
S8877 would subject employers and third-party platforms to steep fines if their job posts don’t include a time frame for if, and when, they expect the job to be filled.
-
Employees say they spend more time managing AI than producing work
For every hour an employee spends getting a useful output from artificial intelligence, they spend another hour making it usable, a Glean survey found.
-
Digital credentials may be valuable, but they’re not being used, research shows
“If digital credentials are going to be adopted, they need to make hiring easier, not more complicated,” 1EdTech’s chief strategy officer said.
-
DOJ deems EEOC’s disparate impact discrimination guidelines unconstitutional
The push against disparate impact liability has been a focus of the Trump administration.
Updated June 15, 2026 -
Firefighter’s Title VII claims survive preclusion even if the rest of his claims don’t, 7th Circuit says
The U.S. Supreme Court has said that federal job discrimination claims are not barred by certain state agencies’ administrative decisions, per the ruling.
-
Americans mostly blame insurers for rising healthcare costs, survey finds
Insurer groups said the survey was skewed against their industry and that hospitals are largely at fault for spiking costs.
-
How flexible work will help working dads, too
Remote work has often been championed for its benefit for working moms, but new insights remind employers how it can help working dads as well.
-
Copy-and-paste AI work can hurt workers’ feelings of ownership, researchers say
Passive use of artificial intelligence to complete certain tasks may erode workers’ confidence in the long-term, according to a recent study, even if it boosts productivity.
Updated June 10, 2026 -
Recruiters have doubled their call time in the past 2 years
As artificial intelligence tools have streamlined certain tasks, HR professionals have used the time saved to make more human connections with applicants and clients, per a new report.
-
Trump’s $100K fee for H-1B visas struck down
A federal judge ruled that the fee amounted to an unlawful tax on the visa program for highly skilled workers.
-
NAACP accuses EEOC of stalling on its records request
According to the civil rights organization, the agency used a fee waiver denial to “delay and obstruct” its access to records that are in the public interest.
-
Opinion
Employers don’t have to build the AI algorithm to own the liability
Some companies and HR leaders assume legal risk lies with the software vendor that created or licensed artificial intelligence tools, but this is often not the case.