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48 votes
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Why is Finland's biggest retailer urging customers to welcome foreign workers?
15 votes -
Wells Fargo employee in Arizona found dead at her desk four days after clocking in
27 votes -
Office retreat gone awry: Worker rescued after allegedly left stranded on Colorado mountain by colleagues
38 votes -
Australians get 'right to disconnect' after working hours
46 votes -
IT staffing agency traps tech workers in their jobs, US federal lawsuit alleges
38 votes -
The rise of the ‘union curious’ - support for unionization among America’s frontline workers
28 votes -
How tens of thousands of grad workers are organizing themselves
12 votes -
American non-compete clauses could become a thing of the past thanks to a new ruling
15 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission bans new noncompete agreements
77 votes -
Where are all the teachers? Breaking down America's teacher shortage crisis in five charts.
34 votes -
US regulatory agencies take steps to fight non compete clauses in employment contracts
18 votes -
Return to office policies do not improve company value, but do make employees miserable: Study
83 votes -
American teachers are missing more school, and there are too few substitutes
46 votes -
DoD updates telework policy for the first time since 2012
17 votes -
UK professor suffered discrimination due to anti-Zionist beliefs, tribunal rules
20 votes -
Inside the strange, secretive rise of the 'overemployed'
31 votes -
Layoffs, survivor guilt, and existential dread
The company I work for laid off half of my office this week. I'm one of the survivors, and trying to process what happened. The company has been transparent about revenues. However, we had no idea...
The company I work for laid off half of my office this week. I'm one of the survivors, and trying to process what happened.
The company has been transparent about revenues. However, we had no idea that we would be so badly penalized for management choices that created significant operating cost overruns in the face of a projected short-term demand decline. I've lost half the members of my immediate team, good friends, people whose work and thoughtfulness I deeply respected. The entire department structure is being upended. The harshness of the selection for people who were being laid off included a teammate who's in the hospital, parents of young children, people on the edge of retirement. I'm suspicious and extra hostile towards the company - it's very significant to me that all the people of color and people who've had recent medical leave are among the lost.
It's not the first time I've watched and survived a company's poor management and bad choices, but this is by far the worst. I've worked very hard at staying professional with the customers this week. I'm still inwardly seething with rage. I'm trying to figure out how to be supportive to the people who are leaving. I'm trying to figure out how to help a team lead who's in his first management job, and is totally devastated and nearly frozen with helplessness. I'm decent at my job, but don't know why I was kept and others with equal or greater skills were let go. I don't feel good about what qualities I might have had that corporate desired to keep - dutifulness, compliance, amiability, reticence?
At the same time, I'm looking at months of double workload even though corporate management claims they'll outsource part of the duties (so that's another symptom that I'm replaceable) and manage the task pipeline. There's a frankly insulting retention bonus if I stay for another year. We've gotten the usual anodyne HR garbage about the employee assistance program and coping skills. The corporate management's left us with the ominous "stay tuned for further announcements over the coming weeks".
I don't have a lot of choices here. I'm trying hard to stay focused on the present, without looking over the cliff of dread at the future. At the moment, I'm the sole support for our household and source of health insurance. My spouse is badly burnt out, and I don't want him to look for work a minute before he's healthy and enthusiastic about a job. I'm a late-50's end-career professional who wouldn't normally have much interest in restarting yet again elsewhere. I very deliberately chose this company, job and location, liked the work I was doing, the people I was doing it with, and I was looking forward to building on it. There's still the possibility that our half-vacant remote office will be closed and consolidated with the corporate headquarters. I have less than zero interest in relocating, and plan to keep separated coworkers who live here as personal friends.
I'll be grateful to hear any advice on coping with this situation, and hope the replies will be helpful to others in future.
47 votes -
‘Don’t mess with us’: WebMD parent company demands return to office in bizarre video
68 votes -
Pizza Hut is lying: They’re not firing their drivers because of a minimum wage hike
61 votes -
Technology is making people busier during their so called free time
34 votes -
Is a degree worth it?
29 votes -
European Court of Human Rights rules that sex workers can seek compensation for lost profits, reversing Bulgarian decision about human trafficking victims
17 votes -
Bosses imposed rigid policies requiring return to the office. Now they’re facing a wave of legal battles.
39 votes -
Amazon is warning employees they risk undermining their own promotion prospects unless they return to the office (RTO) for three days a week, as was mandated by CEO Andy Jassy months ago
60 votes -
Employees can be banned from wearing headscarves, top EU court rules
28 votes -
How meltdowns brought professional advocacy groups to a standstill at a critical moment (2022)
19 votes -
Fika, four-week-holidays and zero overtime – Sweden's stunningly healthy work culture
38 votes -
Union workers score big pay gains as labour action sweeps US
30 votes -
After many years, migrant workers in Norway won legal protection from exploitative agencies – but now a European Free Trade Association ruling puts progress in peril
3 votes -
Amid strikes, one question: Are employers miscalculating?
27 votes -
South Korean teachers seek protection from harassment by students' parents
38 votes -
Lord Sugar documents east London’s rubbish mountains
7 votes -
Meeting bloat has taken over corporate America. Can it be stopped?
46 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 -
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 -
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 -
How US labor movement can win at the bargaining table
14 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 -
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 -
Want employees to return to the office? Then give each one an office.
116 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 -
From car parts to cargo bikes: GKN workers in Italy
6 votes