August 18, 2021
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Remote Work May Impact Career Advancement

     

There are few silver linings to be found in the last 20 months. But one bright spot has been the expansion of remote work as an option. It has had an impact on everything from traffic congestion to worker satisfaction. The flexibility remote work offers is also a boon to companies competing for workers. However, as companies expand their work-from-home policies, they need to be mindful of how it can affect office culture and promotions.

In an article for the New York Times’ “Dealbook,” Sarah Kessler writes that there is the potential for a new form of bias to appear, one that favors workers who choose to attend work in person. In interviews with experts, workers, HR managers and executives at companies including Zillow, Kessler lays out how this bias might affect workers.

For example, in a traditional office setting, when a meeting ends, many attendees may continue the meeting informally at their desks, over lunch or after work. Some of this facetime invariably is with people who have the power to affect promotions. But, when a meeting is a video conference in which some are working from home and others who are in an office, those who are remote do not have the opportunity to put in the requisite facetime and may not stick out to managers when it’s promotion time.

It’s too early to assume that this is going to be the case, and some companies are already considering ways to eliminate this missing interaction or prevent the scenarios where remote workers are passed over for choosing to work from home. Zillow and Salesforce, for example, are eliminating in-person meetings all together. Thus, even if workers are in the office, they will still attend meetings from their desks. Other companies are trying to find ways to facilitate digital “water cooler” moments.

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Health Care Workers Bring Suit Against OSHA over Pandemic Rules

November 2, 2020
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A large coalition of union-represented workers in health care and education are pressing the Ninth Circuit Court to require the Department of Labor to direct its Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to put a rule into effect which has been batted about since the scare of H1N1 in 2009.

Breastfeeding in the Era of Zoom

October 22, 2020
Pregnancy Discrimination
In the era when many office jobs and classrooms have transitioned to video conferencing software and the home/work boundary continues to blur, discomfort around breastfeeding has become a source of major contention. Case in point is a recent story that caught our attention involving a student at Fresno City College, who was publicly called out by her professor for simply asking if she could turn her video off during a lecture to feed her 10-month old.

Annual Law360 Survey Shows Gender Gap in the Legal Profession Remains Wide

October 21, 2020
Gender Discrimination
Increased awareness and focus on gender disparity at law firms has done little over the last year to make gains within the profession, especially at its highest levels, reports Law360 in its annual glass ceiling survey.

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