A new book takes on an overlooked flaw in human judgement that can affect an organization’s ability to make sound decisions about hiring and more.
NPR
Marty Walsh, Boston Mayor With Union Roots, Confirmed As Labor Secretary At Key Time
Marty Walsh, the two-term mayor of Boston, was confirmed as the Labor secretary by the Senate in a 68-29 vote on Monday, becoming the first union leader to run the department in over four decades.
The Women Powering Biden’s Economy Are Rewriting The Course Of American History
Women and people of color are notoriouslyΒ underrepresentedΒ in economics. OnlyΒ 14%Β of full professors are women, and oneΒ surveyΒ found only 1.6% Black faculty in the economics departments of the 30 highest-ranked universities.
Some Faith Leaders Call Equality Act Devastating; For Others, It’s God’s Will
A potential revision of federal civil rights law to extend protection to LGBTQ people could soon get a long-delayed vote in the U.S. Senate, but concerns about its implications for religious freedom cloud its prospects for final passage.
Workers Are Moving First, Asking Questions Later. What Happens When Offices Reopen?
Kate and her husband David had just moved into a one-bedroom apartment in downtown Denver last March.
Biden Faces ‘Balancing Act’ Advancing Clean Energy Alongside Labor Allies
In mid-February β barely a month into his term β President Biden gathered 10 union leaders in the Oval Office. The meeting lasted two hours.
Biden Backs Amazon Warehouse Workers’ Union Drive
Amazon warehouse workers in Alabama voting to unionize won the backing of an important executive.
House To Vote On Equality Act: Here’s What The Law Would Do
The House of Representatives is set to vote Wednesday on the Equality Act, a bill that would ban discrimination against people based on sexual orientation and gender identity.
Pandemic Sets Back Women’s Progress In Workforce
NPR’s Michel Martin discusses how the pandemic has affected women’s participation in the workforce and what can be done about it with Hanna Rosin, Margaret Brower and Jamila Michener.
Millions Are Out Of A Job. Yet Some Employers Wonder: Why Can’t I Find Workers?
At a time when millions of Americans are unemployed, businessman Bill Martin has a head-scratching problem: He’s got plenty of jobs but few people willing to take them.
Life Below $15 An Hour: Workers On The Potential Federal Minimum Wage Hike
Congress is debating whether to hike the federal minimum wage as part of the latest coronavirus relief package. NPR hears from workers who make minimum wage and traces the history of the minimum wage.
Should We Raise The Minimum Wage?
Burr vs Hamilton. The Celtics vs the Lakers. Godzilla vs King Kong. To this list of famous rivalries you can now add: advocates of raising the minimum wage to 15 dollars an hour… versus opponents of raising it.
Former OSHA Head Talks Biden’s Executive Order On Workplace Safety
NPR’s Michel Martin speaks to Dr. David Michaels, former head of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, about the president’s move to strengthen workplace safety rules during the pandemic.
Trader Joe’s, Dollar General And Others Are Paying Workers To Get Vaccines
A growing number of grocers are adopting a novel approach in the race to get their workers vaccinated against COVID-19: providing pay incentives.
U.S. Still Lags In COVID-19 Workplace Safety, Former OSHA Official Says
As COVID-19 deaths and illnesses mount, essential workers β who are denied the chance to work from home β are struggling to stay safe. And it’s far from clear whether the federal government is doing enough to protect them, according to a former top federal workplace safety official.