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Planned Parenthood of Illinois agrees to pay $500K after EEOC alleges DEI-based harassment
The organization’s president and CEO told HR Dive the alleged misconduct took place under prior leadership.
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Court doesn’t buy employer’s defense for not complying with race bias settlement
A Georgia school district said “qualified immunity” meant it couldn’t be sued for refusing to implement changes pursuant to its agreement with the plaintiff.
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White House calls for ‘minimally burdensome’ federal AI rules
The administration urged Congress to avoid creating new federal rulemaking bodies for AI and instead lean on existing agencies and industry-led standards.
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ZipRecruiter is the latest job platform to release ChatGPT app
The rise of ChatGPT and other large language models has heavily disrupted the job ad market through reduced visibility and lower click-through rates, research shows.
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AI success stems from better collaboration, not prompts
Specific behaviors can separate routine AI use from impactful human-AI interaction, according to a new report.
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New Minnesota bill would require 90-day notice for AI that could displace workers
“Conversations with experts and industry leads indicate this displacement is only a matter of time,” Minnesota Rep. David Gottfried, the bill’s sponsor, told HR Dive.
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This week in 5 numbers: AI trainer jobs are surging
Here’s a roundup of numbers from the last week of HR news — including how much March Madness-related distractions can cost companies.
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NAMI: 1 in 4 workers considered quitting over their job’s toll on their mental health
Less than a third of employees said they have received any mental health-related training at work, the report found.
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Employers can use March Madness to reengage burnt-out workers, firm suggests
Rather than trying to quash worker distraction or absences tied to the annual tournament, companies should embrace the bracketology.
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Major urban hubs boomerang as best source for global talent, analysis finds
U.S. workers are now as close to major cities like New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston and San Francisco, as they were in 2021 prior to the pandemic-era exodus, Deel reported.
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A PIP is not always an adverse action under SCOTUS’ relaxed bias test, court says
The decision may demonstrate some of the limits of Muldrow v. City of St. Louis, which employer-side attorneys have argued favors plaintiffs alleging job discrimination.
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Chinese engineer can’t pursue age, racial bias lawsuit, 10th Circuit affirms
The City of Tulsa, Oklahoma, chose a candidate with greater leadership experience for a management position, the appeals court said.
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How the gender wage gap may be both structural and psychological
The glass ceiling and promotional bias hold women back, but so do women’s own expectations of themselves, according to recent reports.
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The hospitality industry’s gender pay gap is ‘structural,’ analysis finds
Progress on the pay gap has generally stalled, various reports indicate, and it is particularly notable in food service.
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Top HR executives are gaining prominence, Conference Board says
“Growth in CHRO and CTO roles signals that talent, culture and digital capability are now viewed as enterprise risks, not support functions,” one researcher said.
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Column
How a Florida pronoun bill could clash with Title VII
HR Dive’s Caroline Colvin digs a little deeper into the legal implications — or complications — of HB 641, or the proposed Freedom of Conscience in the Workplace Act.
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Disney executive alleges HR combed his private coaching sessions for ‘dirt’
The exec butted heads with HR due to his “his direct, streamlined, and performance-driven leadership style,” a complaint alleged.
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AI boom drives worker compensation cuts, study finds
Both jobs and paychecks are taking a hit as companies ramp up artificial intelligence spending to avoid falling behind competitors, according to the research.
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Employees say AI does more harm than good
There’s a “growing concern about the pace of AI adoption and a clear gap in employer support,” according to a Jobs for the Future vice president.
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Skills-based talent practices can create $125K in ROI per worker, report says
The research, which focused on the cybersecurity field, highlights what other studies have said: L&D is key to both retention and fixing skill gaps.
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Feds keep marijuana tests for workers despite Trump reclassification order
Several years of legalization efforts at the state level have enhanced compliance concerns for employers.
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Same-race bias, unbalanced DEI training: 4 lessons from recent Title VII cases
During last week’s National Employment Law Institute briefing, attorneys touched on how employers have messed up — or been saved — by their understanding of the law.
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GuardDog Telehealth admits to improper record sharing in Epic court case
In an agreement between the two companies, GuardDog admitted it masqueraded as a healthcare provider in order to gain access to medical records.
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Deep Dive
Meet the former feds operating a ‘shadow’ EEOC
The group hopes to provide guidance to stakeholders “given the EEOC’s abdication of its responsibilities to do so,” said Jocelyn Samuels, former vice chair for the agency.
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Office space must support learning and well-being to attract workers, design firm says
Tension around RTO may have eased in recent months, but employers still need to ensure physical spaces are responsive to employees’ needs, according to Gensler.
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