Compliance
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This week in 5 numbers: Remote work may be hurting college grads
Here’s a roundup of numbers from the last week — including how artificial intelligence will affect customer service jobs.
By Ginger Christ • June 4, 2026 -
OSHA inspector sues DOL, alleging manager sexually harassed her
Employers may be automatically liable when supervisors harass employees, the government has previously warned.
By Kate Tornone • June 4, 2026 -
Explore the Trendline➔
Adeline Kon/HR Dive
TrendlineInside the rapidly changing world of compliance
The HR landscape is ever-shifting, leaving compliance professionals to meet today’s requirements while keeping an eye on the future.
By HR Dive staff -
Amazon not liable for contractor’s medical emergency, district court rules
While courts have said there may be a “strong moral and humanitarian obligation” to inspect situations that set off an alarm, there is no legal requirement to do so, per the order.
By Ginger Christ • June 3, 2026 -
Illinois pushes back against Trump in move to ban disparate impact bias
Practices such as strength tests or criminal background checks have been the subject of disparate impact challenges in the past.
By Kate Tornone • June 3, 2026 -
Identity of HR 2026
AI is coming for the workplace — and HR is in the driver’s seat
HR pros are laser focused on training and worker wellness amid tumultuous change.
By Ginger Christ • June 3, 2026 -
SCOTUS reverse bias decision didn’t nix Title VII comparator requirements, court says
The 5th Circuit rejected a plaintiff’s argument that the high court effectively eliminated his need to show he was treated less favorably than a similarly situated employee.
By Ryan Golden • June 2, 2026 -
The image by Ben Miller is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0
Adult entertainers do not ‘consent to harassment at work,’ EEOC official says
Chicago’s Admiral Theatre in late May settled allegations it allowed customers to engage in unwanted touching of female dancers and subjected Black dancers to different standards and limits.
By Emilie Shumway • June 2, 2026 -
Feds confirm overtime-exempt workers can perform nonexempt roles
DOL has addressed overtime calculation issues several times since the relaunch of its opinion letter program in mid-2025.
By Ryan Golden • June 1, 2026 -
Court partly sides with employer dinged for unlawfully firing workers who shared pay
The NLRB “prejudicially erred” in its decision that a technology firm illegally terminated employees for creating a salary spreadsheet, per the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals.
By Ryan Golden • June 1, 2026 -
Sponsored by Auris
Small businesses are driving the future of 401(k) adoption
Summer hiring is exposing payroll and compliance gaps many SMBs can’t afford to miss.
June 1, 2026 -
EEOC to debate tossing Biden-era strategic enforcement plan
The commission will vote June 4 whether to rescind the plan and replace it.
By Ginger Christ • May 29, 2026 -
Workers transporting goods need not cross state lines to be exempt from arbitration, SCOTUS holds
The unanimous decision against Flowers Foods provided employers little clarity about how similar future cases might play out, one attorney told HR Dive.
By Ryan Golden • May 29, 2026 -
Lawsuit pointing to understaffed HR department at Tesla cleared for jury trial
The lawsuit alleges the employer allowed slurs, segregation and other racism to persist at its embattled Fremont, California, factory.
By Kate Tornone • May 28, 2026 -
White broadcaster lawfully fired for on-air Snoop Dogg quote, racial slur, court says
Termination for such conduct is lawful even when a plaintiff argues that the offensiveness is “wrongly concluded,” the court wrote.
By Ryan Golden • May 27, 2026 -
Central Transport reaches $5.5M settlement with EEOC for allegedly refusing to hire women drivers
The carrier allegedly selected less qualified male applicants and subjected women who applied to jobs to separate hiring procedures.
By Larry Avila • May 27, 2026 -
Buc-ee’s allegedly treated worker with a disability with ‘reckless indifference’
“Inflexible thinking” can cause employers to run afoul of reasonable accommodation requirements, an acting regional attorney for the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission said.
By Ginger Christ • May 27, 2026 -
EEOC chair says Trump administration is ‘widening’ civil rights aperture
Andrea Lucas also addressed her previous social media call for White men to bring discrimination claims at the Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit.
By Caroline Colvin • May 27, 2026 -
Edward Jones allegedly paid Black financial advisers less than their White peers
One employee involved in a race discrimination lawsuit against the company also said she was told to use “a more race-neutral name” during an interview.
By Ginger Christ • May 26, 2026 -
Worker’s disciplinary write-up omitting ‘relevant information’ grants her a retaliation trial
An Amazon worker can move forward with claims the company discriminated against her based on her sexuality.
By Emilie Shumway • May 22, 2026 -
Google docked dad’s performance rating for taking baby bonding leave, lawsuit claims
A new manager treated the plaintiff, a single father, with “increased hostility” following his return from leave, according to the complaint.
By Ryan Golden • May 22, 2026 -
Dems re-up overtime bill that would set threshold over $89K by 2030
Following the U.S. Department of Labor’s overtime rule rescission, Congressional Democrats introduced a bill that would greatly expand the number of workers who qualify for overtime.
By Caroline Colvin • May 21, 2026 -
This week in 5 numbers: More than 1 in 5 employees say they’ve witnessed unethical or illegal conduct at work
Here’s a roundup of numbers from the last week of HR news — including how many women hold seats on the corporate boards of Russell 3000 companies.
By Ginger Christ • May 21, 2026 -
Feds, home care company eye $3M deal to end overtime, misclassification claims
The lawsuit stemmed from a U.S. Department of Labor investigation allegedly finding that employees were intentionally misclassified as independent contractors.
By Ryan Golden • May 21, 2026 -
Employer to pay $4.25M to settle claims it failed to consider vaccine exemptions
Recent EEOC enforcement involving COVID-19 vaccines appears to go hand in hand with the administration’s broader prioritization of Christian issues.
By Emilie Shumway • May 19, 2026 -
Supreme Court to determine if school employees can sue under Title IX
The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in 2024 that Title IX's right to sue doesn't apply to school staff, diverging from at least eight other appeals courts.
By Naaz Modan • May 19, 2026