Compliance
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EEOC says agencies may issue bathroom policies that restrict trans federal workers
The commission overturned a 2015 ruling that outlawed bans on transgender employees’ use of bathrooms consistent with their gender identities.
By Ryan Golden • Feb. 27, 2026 -
EEOC warns Fortune 500 to ‘reject identity politics’ in anti-DEI push
A letter from EEOC underscores the Trump administration’s stance on “unlawful discrimination” related to diversity, equity and inclusion at work.
By Ginger Christ • Feb. 26, 2026 -
NLRB reverts to joint employer rule it crafted in Trump’s first term
The board said it maintains the “substantial direct and immediate control” it articulated in 2020.
By Ryan Golden • Feb. 26, 2026 -
This week in 5 numbers: Federal government could offer matching retirement contributions
Here’s a roundup of numbers from the last week of HR news — including how many workers think artificial intelligence can be trusted without oversight.
By Ginger Christ • Feb. 26, 2026 -
DOL moves to loosen independent contractor regulations
The agency proposed a return to the “economic reality test” adopted during the first Trump administration.
By Caroline Colvin • Updated Feb. 26, 2026 -
New federal paid leave framework confronts familiar divide on Capitol Hill
A bipartisan group of lawmakers introduced the More Paid Leave for More Americans Act in 2025, which would establish a federal grant-based system.
By Ryan Golden • Feb. 25, 2026 -
Opinion
Compliance complexity: How employers can cope with an increasingly fractured state-law patchwork
“The simultaneous withdrawal of federal guidance and expansion of state protections creates unprecedented compliance challenges for multi-state employers,” writes Vanessa Kelly, member of the firm at Clark Hill.
By Vanessa Kelly • Feb. 24, 2026 -
NLRB applies Browning-Ferris joint employer standard at court’s direction
Following the D.C. Circuit’s instructions, the board agreed to apply its embattled 2015 framework in one case, but said it still adheres to its stricter 2020 interpretation.
By Emilie Shumway • Feb. 24, 2026 -
Worker did not plausibly argue obesity was a disability, 1st Circuit finds
In a lawsuit filed against Cigna for refusing to cover weight loss medication, a Maine worker described the condition and its impact too generally, the appeals court said.
By Emilie Shumway • Feb. 23, 2026 -
Clinic settles pregnancy bias lawsuit in which HR director allegedly said he ‘knew nothing’ of PWFA
The case brought by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission involved claims that arose shortly before and after the law’s 2023 effective date.
By Ryan Golden • Updated Feb. 23, 2026 -
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.
By Ginger Christ • Feb. 23, 2026 -
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.
Feb. 23, 2026 -
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.
By Ryan Golden • Feb. 20, 2026 -
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.
By Emilie Shumway • Feb. 20, 2026 -
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.
By Caroline Colvin • Updated Feb. 20, 2026 -
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.
By Kate Tornone • Feb. 18, 2026 -
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.
By Emilie Shumway • Feb. 18, 2026 -
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.
By Ryan Golden • Feb. 17, 2026 -
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.”
By Laurel Kalser • Feb. 13, 2026 -
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.
By Ryan Golden • Feb. 13, 2026 -
This week in 5 numbers: Nearly one-third of workers want to break up with their jobs
Here’s a roundup of numbers from the last week of HR news — including how much the demand for human resources workers has fallen.
By Ginger Christ • Feb. 12, 2026 -
Kaiser reaches settlement with DOL over alleged mental healthcare access failures
DOL alleged that Kaiser didn’t offer adequate provider networks and used patient questionnaires to prevent members from receiving care.
By Ginger Christ • Feb. 11, 2026 -
EEOC to spotlight ‘reverse bias’ in 2026, attorneys say
Employers should prepare for “aggressive and assertive” activity on this front from the agency, a source told HR Dive.
By Ryan Golden • Feb. 11, 2026 -
Legal group claims victory after EEOC ‘retreated’ on law firm DEI letters
Most of the 20 major law firms that received letters declined to provide the requested information, and the agency said it “considers the matter of responding to those letters closed.”
By Emilie Shumway • Feb. 10, 2026 -
SHRM: Inadmissible evidence ‘poisoned’ verdict in race bias, retaliation case
The HR organization asked for a new trial after a federal jury awarded $11.5 million to a former employee last year.
By Ryan Golden • Feb. 9, 2026