The Latest
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Discrimination, retaliation lawsuit against Marriott hotel can proceed, judge rules
A federal judge said Shreeji Hotel Group was “more than simply the absent owner” of the hotel and would have to face the allegations, court records show.
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Are rising costs hitting voluntary benefits?
For some workers, voluntary benefits can fill financial coverage gaps left by health insurance, a benefits expert said.
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More employers considering medical, pharmacy vendor switch amid rising healthcare costs, survey finds
Healthcare affordability continues to keep employers up at night. More businesses are shopping for new healthcare vendors as a result, according to the Purchaser Business Group on Health.
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This week in 5 numbers: Workers turn to generative AI for medical advice
Here’s a roundup of numbers from the last week of HR news — including how much time workers say they lose each week due to inefficient systems.
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US workers say they are experiencing ‘death by a thousand pings’
Nearly half of employees said they lost work to inefficient systems, according to a survey from Isolved.
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Deloitte Consulting penalized employees for taking pregnancy-related leave, lawsuit alleges
Employees who took protected pregnancy-related, parental or family leave allegedly received lower scores on their annual assessments, according to the complaint.
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IRS names professions qualifying for tax deductions on tipped wages
Just days before the Wednesday tax deadline, employers got more clarity on significant changes to payroll and W-2 reporting changes they are facing.
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Employee benefits regulator to focus on ‘bad actors’
The U.S. Department of Labor’s Employee Benefits Security Administration said it will target enforcement on “the most egregious conduct and significant harm.”
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LeMay, Warren. (2019). "Potter Stewart US Federal Courthouse, Cincinnati, OH" [Photograph]. Retrieved from Flickr.
Worker’s firing days before retirement didn’t violate ERISA, judge holds
An Ohio district court found that Western & Southern cited a legitimate basis for its decision to terminate the plaintiff, who spent 18 years with the company.
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Payscale CFO calls for ‘always on’ comp talks
Generation Z is one of the drivers behind the shift toward more transparent and frequent pay discussions, Payscale’s CFO said.
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Q&A
Veteran architect wants more women on jobsites
Gail Sullivan, founder of Boston-based Studio G Architects, said conditions have improved for women in construction, but she still wants to see more progress.
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Why AI readiness training fails
Organizational friction over artificial intelligence isn’t the fault of employees but rather poor change management, experts told HR Dive.
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Opaque hiring process prompts job seekers to ‘spray and pray,’ Monster says
A lack of communication has led applicants to apply to as many jobs as possible regardless of whether the positions match their skills, per a report.
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With health costs ballooning, workers turn to wellness and the internet, ADP finds
When workers delay care because of cost, it could hurt employers more in the long run, other research suggests.
Updated April 16, 2026 -
Retrieved from Hillcrest Medical Center on April 14, 2026
Tulsa medical center only let workers pump if ‘sufficient staffing’ was available, DOL says
Hillcrest Medical Center allegedly violated the PUMP Act by limiting when workers could express breast milk, DOL alleged in a recent news release. Both DOL and Hillcrest say it has since updated its policies.
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EEOC settles with Republic Services for $200K in sex discrimination case
The lawsuit alleged that a Republic affiliate in Springfield, Missouri, hired male applicants over more qualified female applicants starting in early 2020.
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What makes a culture of learning?
Employers working to implement a learning culture often struggle to get employees to use provided learning programs, research shows.
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HR skills are among the most sought-after in the job market, Indeed reports
Employee engagement and management expertise were coveted even outside of traditional human resources roles.
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Many agents plan to leave their current job, but fear of AI isn’t a big factor
Most customer service representatives are on the lookout for positions offering hours that fit their needs, Verint found.
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IBM strikes $17M deal to end feds’ probe of DEI programs
An assistant U.S. attorney general said the settlement demonstrated the Justice Department’s commitment to ending “woke unconstitutional practices.”
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Retrieved from Federal Injury Centers of Birmingham & Montgomery on April 13, 2026
Trans worker fired for ‘bringing morale down’ can proceed with case, court says
After working for the company for one year and eight months, the plaintiff was fired within days of disclosing that she was transgender.
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AI industry recruiting platform faces multiple lawsuits over data breach
The recent incident allegedly resulted in lost personal information and damages including breach of contract, plaintiffs told a California federal district court.
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Opinion
AI is stress-testing hiring — and hurting trust
The “AI arms race” has created a hiring system that moves faster than ever but with far less clarity, writes one leader at New Collar Skills.
Updated April 15, 2026 -
Week in review: ‘Payroll leakage’ is prompting millions in losses
We’re rounding up last week’s stories, from massive U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission prelitigation payments to improving performance development.
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FedEx, pilots union reach tentative contract agreement
The deal, which would raise pilots’ hourly wages by nearly 40%, is the second tentative pact between the two parties during a multiyear negotiations process.