Compliance
-
University of Pennsylvania rebuffs EEOC demand for employee records
The Ivy League institution said it is objecting to creating lists of workers that would “reveal their Jewish faith or ancestry” over safety and other concerns.
By Natalie Schwartz • Jan. 22, 2026 -
Screenshot: Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions/YouTube
‘We need to understand our place’: EEOC scraps harassment guidance protecting transgender workers
Commissioner Kalpana Kotagal pushed back against the decision in her remarks, arguing the agency was “throwing the baby out with the bathwater” by rescinding the entire guidance.
By Ryan Golden , Emilie Shumway • Jan. 22, 2026 -
1 year into Trump 2.0, HR professionals are ‘caught in the middle’ of the DEI debate
As the White House and EEOC solidify their anti-DEI stances, here are a few things HR can keep in mind.
By Caroline Colvin • Jan. 21, 2026 -
Transgender woman’s ERISA lawsuit fails as facial surgery was deemed ‘cosmetic’
Under ERISA, the relevant question is not whether an employer’s provider group “should cover certain procedures, but only whether it actually did agree to cover them,” the judge in the case said.
By Emilie Shumway • Jan. 20, 2026 -
Employee who seemingly told work he would misuse FMLA leave still gets jury trial
The decision shows just how thoroughly a court may scrutinize an employer’s handling of intermittent Family and Medical Leave Act leave.
By Ryan Golden • Jan. 16, 2026 -
EEOC’s recent move will consolidate power in chair, past commissioners warn
Republican commissioners voted to rescind a procedure that allowed time for commissioners to review proposed actions and discuss their concerns.
By Ryan Golden • Jan. 16, 2026 -
This week in 5 numbers: Companies see 50 more applicants per role
Here’s a roundup of numbers from the last week of HR news — including how likely candidates are to score an interview from an online application.
By Ginger Christ • Jan. 15, 2026 -
Butterball piece-rate employee can’t revive wage claim, 4th Circuit says
The turkey loader’s claim of withheld pay was invalid, the North Carolina federal court and 4th Circuit agreed.
By Caroline Colvin • Jan. 15, 2026 -
State paid family leave benefit changes in 2026
An Epstein Becker & Green attorney noted that navigating the logistics of multiple state leave plans can get tricky.
By Ginger Christ • Jan. 15, 2026 -
EEOC, Tesla head to private mediation in race-based harassment lawsuit
The parties are in the process of selecting a mediator and expect mediation to start in March or April.
By Ginger Christ • Jan. 14, 2026 -
Walmart settles EEOC charge it illegally revoked a worker’s disability accommodation
A change in management can be a common time for employers to run afoul of discrimination laws, particularly when an accommodation is suddenly revoked.
By Emilie Shumway • Jan. 13, 2026 -
SCOTUS asks White House to opine on shipbuilders’ no-poach dispute
Employees in the case alleged that several companies maintained an “unwritten rule” not to hire each other’s naval engineers and conspired to suppress wages.
By Ryan Golden • Jan. 13, 2026 -
Staffing agency pays $185K to settle EEOC claims it fired workers for pregnancy
Eastridge Workforce Solutions told HR Dive it denied the charges and said the company had admitted no wrongdoing.
By Emilie Shumway • Updated Jan. 15, 2026 -
Feds caution employers about bonuses, pay structures in overtime compliance
The U.S. Department of Labor also addressed exemptions for “learned professionals” and commission-earning employees under the Fair Labor Standards Act.
By Ryan Golden • Jan. 12, 2026 -
EEOC wins retaliation case for Black dental assistant in Louisiana
A CEO’s statements were direct evidence the dental assistant was placed on unpaid leave and fired because she complained about race discrimination, a federal district court held.
By Laurel Kalser • Jan. 9, 2026 -
New DOL independent contractor rule arrives at Trump White House
The administration may decide to return to the “economic reality” standard it articulated in a final rule released at the tail end of the president’s first term in office.
By Ryan Golden • Jan. 9, 2026 -
DOL back-wage recovery hit 5-year high in 2025, despite closing fewer cases
The Wage and Hour Division released an analysis of its 2025 data, also drawing attention to two updated video series on the Fair Labor Standards Act and the Family and Medical Leave Act.
By Caroline Colvin • Jan. 8, 2026 -
This week in 5 numbers: Lonely workers say they miss more work
Here’s a roundup of numbers from the last week of HR news — including the number of companies who cite a lack of relevant experience among candidates as a major barrier to hiring.
By Ginger Christ • Jan. 8, 2026 -
Minimum wage increases hit 19 states in 2026
A number of states crossed the $15 per hour threshold long used as a rallying cry among worker advocates.
By Ryan Golden • Jan. 8, 2026 -
Former EEOC officials condemn agency’s move to drop anti-harassment guidance
The group said EEOC’s request to the White House “is yet another salvo in this Administration’s prolonged attack on LGBTQI+ people.”
By Ginger Christ • Jan. 7, 2026 -
‘Reverse discrimination’ was an enduring 2025 workplace trend
An ex-Google employee, a Walmart manager, a Paramount exec: Majority-group discrimination claims were an increasingly buzzy HR topic last year.
By Caroline Colvin • Jan. 7, 2026 -
DOL clarifies FMLA’s stance on travel time, school closure in opinion letters
While the Family and Medical Leave Act protects time spent traveling to appointments, it does not encompass stops for other unrelated activities, the labor department noted.
By Emilie Shumway • Jan. 6, 2026 -
Trump can order employers to pay extra H-1B fee, court holds
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has appealed a ruling finding that potential harm to the economy and employers is not grounds for overturning the president’s Sept. 19 proclamation.
By Laurel Kalser • Jan. 5, 2026 -
Litigants end McDonald’s no-poach agreement saga after almost a decade
Multiple fast-food chains have since ceased using the restrictive hiring agreements at issue.
By Ryan Golden • Jan. 5, 2026 -
What the Supreme Court said about employment law in 2025
The justices handed down a verdict that could prove to be one of their most consequential for the discipline in years.
By Ryan Golden • Jan. 5, 2026