The EEOC announced that the online filing system for EEO-1 Component 1 data collection will open at the end of April 2021, as previously announced. The big news, though, is that the data collection will remain open until July 2021. Exact dates and deadlines will be announced when the online system launches.
Archives for March 21, 2021
How to Measure Burnout Accurately and Ethically
The Maslach Burnout Inventory can be a helpful tool — but only when organizations use it carefully.
Does Your Office Have a Jargon Problem?
Research shows we use buzzwords to impress our colleagues — but they often have the opposite effect.
Pay Discrimination Suit Against Disney Adds Pay Secrecy Claim
A claim that the company illegally prohibits employees from discussing pay has been added to a lawsuit accusing it of paying women less than men. Disney has aggressively pushed back.
Sam’s Club C.E.O. on the Company’s High Sales and Low Wages
Kathryn McLay, an Australian who worked for years in finance, wants employees to know “how valued they are.”
Why Are We Worrying About Women’s Work?
Some liberals are wrongly concerned that the child benefit in the Biden rescue plan could help poor mothers stay home.
First Metropolitan Financial Services to Pay $100,000 to Settle EEOC Pay Discrimination Lawsuit
First Metropolitan Financial Services, Inc. has agreed to pay $100,000 to resolve a pay discrimination lawsuit filed by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), the federal agency announced today.
What Is Work Worth?
Big ideas for rethinking pay.
Announcing the 2021 Gallup Exceptional Workplace Award Winners
Leaders had to make hard decisions in 2020.
Employees use survey to rate their workplace
Metro Atlanta employees want to work for companies with strong values and managers who make it easy for them to do a good job.
How to Manage the New Hybrid Workplace
Many employees won’t go back to the office full-time. That’s going to require a massive rethinking on the part of bosses.
The Plight of the Remote Workers Who Live Alone
Employees who live alone believe colleagues with families have received special attention during Covid-19. Managers should take some simple steps to fix that.
Google to Invest $7 Billion in Bet on Post-Pandemic Office
Tech giant says ‘coming together’ is core to its culture in announcing U.S. investment
Senate Will Vote Monday On Walsh Nomination To Be Labor Secretary
President Biden’s nomination of Boston Mayor Marty Walsh to be Secretary of Labor will be voted on by the U.S. Senate this Monday, according to CBS News.
Nearly half of Americans think Black people face a lot of discrimination, survey says
Most Americans say that people of color in the United States face at least some discrimination, according to a survey published Thursday by the Pew Research Center.