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Our editors boast more than 60 years of experience in employment law and HR related topics. Find advice to those tricky issues such as when to terminate, as well as stay up to date with the latest regulations as they occur.

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EEOC signals huge 2026 priority shift

EEOC Chair Andrea Lucas told the Washington Post that the EEOC is ready to focus on stamping out discrimination resulting from diversity, equity and inclusion programs and anti-American bias. She also intends to streamline the agency’s Pregnant Workers Fairness Act regulations and revise harassment guidelines that protect transgender workers.

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Different treatment doesn’t always equal a hostile environment

The Supreme Court recently concluded that if an employee was treated differently because of a protected characteristic, this was enough to warrant a jury trial in a discrimination case. Now, a federal appeals court has refused to extend that reasoning to a hostile work environment claim.

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Tackling the top HR problems in the first quarter

The new year is here, and with it, the big HR headaches of the first quarter of 2026 are coming into focus. Here are some of the crucial issues we will be covering as the Trump administration enters its second full year.

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New York set to enact first AI law after Trump executive order

On Dec. 11, President Trump signed an executive order on artificial intelligence aimed at promoting the United States as a global leader in AI development. Almost immediately after, New York Governor Kathy Hochul signed legislation that will establish new state rules on the development of AI models.

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Returning from FMLA? Know the fitness-for-duty rules

Can you please go over the fitness-for-duty process for employees returning from FMLA leave? We want to make sure our employees are ready and able to perform all their essential functions again after their FMLA time off.

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New Jersey moves to protect disparate-impact claims

Agencies like the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission are investigating fewer disparate-impact claims and scaling back lawsuits. That’s causing a backlash among state anti-discrimination agencies, which believe the disparate-impact liability theory is an important anti-discrimination tool. One state, New Jersey, has now taken action to preserve the ability to bring such lawsuits.

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New York bans credit history in hiring: What HR must do before April

New York employers can no longer request or use an applicant’s consumer credit history—including credit reports, credit scores or information directly obtained from candidates about their debts, bankruptcies, judgments or liens. The law makes it discriminatory to use this information when making decisions about hiring, compensation or employment terms.

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DOL kicks off the new year by issuing 5 opinion letters

Nothing says Happy New Year better than a raft of opinion letters from the Department of Labor. The letters cover the Fair Labor Standards Act and the Family and Medical Leave Act.

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We may have found evidence of drug use on the job—what now?

I am an HR manager at a big nursery with hundreds of greenhouses, and we provide our employees with portable toilets. It was brought to my attention by the cleaner that he found a cut-up soda can and a syringe in one of the potties. I have never encountered any drug use at our nursery, and I am not sure how I can handle this situation.

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Track each supervisor’s disciplinary patterns

When deciding whether discipline was biased, courts often seek to compare workers who have the same supervisor, not just those who have the same job. That’s because discrimination is often manifested by individual acts, not a systemic, organization-wide problem. That makes it important to track discipline by supervisor.

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