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11 votes
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Lord Sugar documents east London’s rubbish mountains
7 votes -
Union SAG-AFTRA votes for strike against video game makers
23 votes -
US President Joe Biden urges striking auto workers to “stick with it” in picket line visit unparalleled in history
90 votes -
California workers who cut countertops are dying of an incurable disease
51 votes -
World-renowned instrument maker Moog slashes jobs at Asheville manufacturing center
15 votes -
Writers Guild reaches tentative agreement with studios and streamers
28 votes -
More than 1,000 London Metropolitan Police officers suspended or on restricted duties amid force clean-up
27 votes -
Meeting bloat has taken over corporate America. Can it be stopped?
46 votes -
Tired, overworked and underpaid: Why doctors in Europe are going on strike
16 votes -
How “little tech” is driving workplace surveillance—and what can be done to push back
29 votes -
US President Joe Biden strongly defends auto workers in first remarks after strike
29 votes -
About 13,000 workers go on strike seeking better wages and benefits from Detroit’s three automakers
62 votes -
Is understaffing a new norm?
I'm asking this as a genuine question, not as a hot take. Where I'm coming from: My husband and I went to dinner the other night -- apologies from the waitress on being shortstaffed. A sign on a...
I'm asking this as a genuine question, not as a hot take.
Where I'm coming from:
My husband and I went to dinner the other night -- apologies from the waitress on being shortstaffed. A sign on a local store asks for patience with the lack of staff. The people staffing order pickup at a nearby department store aren't enough to keep up with orders. At my most recent doctor's appointment I spent almost 45 minutes in the exam room waiting to be seen (for an appointment I had to make over a year ago). A few hours after the appointment I went to pick up a prescription, and it hadn't even begun to be processed yet. There was only one cashier working, and she was having to jump between the in-person line and the drive-thru lane. At my job we don't have enough substitute teachers, so we're dependent on regular teachers covering classes during their "prep" periods.
This is merely a recent snapshot from my own life that I'm using as a sort of representative sample, but it feels like something that's been building for a while -- like something that was going to be temporary due to COVID but has stuck around and is now just what we're supposed to get used to. I remember that I used to keep thinking that understaffing would eventually go away over time, but it seems like it's just standard practice now?
Is this something specific to my experiences or my local area (I'm in the US, for context)? Are other people seeing the same thing?
Assuming it isn't just me, is there anything out there besides anecdotes that addresses this phenomenon? I don't want to lean solely on gut reactions, but I also can't deny that nearly every business I go to seems visibly short-staffed all of the time.
124 votes -
The housing crisis driving America’s teacher shortage
27 votes -
Robots are pouring drinks in Vegas. As AI grows, the city's workers brace for change
19 votes -
All work and no pay: Findings from the 2023 State of the American Teacher survey
14 votes -
Why most tennis players struggle to make a living
5 votes -
Female surgeons sexually assaulted while operating in the UK
38 votes -
Some small towns in America are disbanding police forces, citing hiring woes
23 votes -
As employers expand artificial intelligence in hiring, few states in the USA have rules
12 votes -
Brazilian delivery workers take their fight to get app users to pick up their orders to local legislatures
16 votes -
The number of strikes rippling across the US seem big, but the total number of Americans walking off the job remains historically low
14 votes -
The women’s recession is officially over — but not everyone has recovered equally
10 votes -
Treasury Department releases first-of-its-kind report on benefits of unions to the US economy
61 votes -
How US labor movement can win at the bargaining table
14 votes -
TSMC blames struggle to build Phoenix plant on skilled labor shortage but workers cite disorganization and safety concerns
31 votes -
A warning to employers that US NLRB labor agency has changed the rules governing formation of unions to be easier for workers and harder for employers to oppose
41 votes -
Zoom CEO reportedly tells staff: Workers can't build trust or collaborate... on Zoom
52 votes -
Women working in Antarctica say they were left to fend for themselves against sexual harassers
50 votes -
In a rare win, a migrant worker sued his bosses in Singapore. And won
22 votes -
Walt Disney Pictures VFX workers move to unionize
50 votes -
Bosses dislike work-from-home but suspect they’re stuck with it
72 votes -
Madison Reeve explains why she quit Linus Tech Tips (CW: self harm, slurs, sexual harassment)
167 votes -
Boots Riley interview about SAG, WGA Strikes and the future of Hollywood's labor movement
13 votes -
Want employees to return to the office? Then give each one an office.
116 votes -
US Federal judge orders Southwest Airlines attorneys to attend ‘religious-liberty training’ from conservative Christian legal advocacy group
42 votes -
Italian man crushed to death under falling cheese wheels
42 votes -
Embracer Group has shut down Campfire Cabal as the company begins closing down some of its development studios
8 votes -
US CNBC anchor accuses UAW leader of 'class warfare' for fighting for workers
32 votes -
On "bullshit" jobs - New data supports the idea that some jobs are "so completely pointless, unnecessary, or pernicious that even the employee cannot justify its existence"
66 votes -
Wisconsin’s dairy industry relies on undocumented immigrants, but the state won’t let them legally drive
20 votes -
American Physician Partners is latest physician staffing firm to fold — it follows Envision, and physicians consider further consequences of difficult market
9 votes -
99-year-old US trucking company Yellow shuts down, putting 30,000 out of work
30 votes -
From car parts to cargo bikes: GKN workers in Italy
6 votes -
California hotel workers are on strike because app based staffing agencies punish them for refusing to cross picket lines
28 votes -
They’re the names you don’t know. Hollywood’s ‘journeyman’ actors explain why they are striking.
13 votes -
Trevor Project begins layoffs during union bargaining session, two months after recognising union
10 votes -
Teamsters in the USA win historic UPS contract, with zero concessions
87 votes -
Inside American Starbucks' dirty war against organized labor
23 votes