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The Most Interesting HR Stories of the Week

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Jan 14, 2022
This article is part of a series called The Most Interesting HR Stories of the Week.

Welcome to “The Most Interesting HR Stories of the Week,” a weekly post that features talent insights and information from around the web to kick off your weekend. Here’s what’s of interest this week:

Top Articles to Read Now

The Supreme Court Quashes Covid-19 Mandates. Now What?

“In a 6 to 3 vote, the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday throttled President Biden’s federal vaccination mandate, requiring that employers with at least 100 employees had to mandate Covid-19 vaccinations or submit to weekly testing. In a per curiam decision, which means that the author of the decision is not named, the court sent the case back to the lower courts for a ruling on the merits but effectively killed it.” What does this mean for your company going forward?

No More Working for Jerks!

“As individuals’s work routines have been upended by the pandemic, they’ve begun to query the thrum of unpleasantness and accumulation of indignities they used to shrug off as a part of the workplace deal. Some are saying: no extra working for jerks. But it’s not unlawful to be a jerk, which introduces a hiccup into that mean-colleague reckoning. The definition of a bully is commonly within the eye of the coffee-fetcher.”

The Death of Average

“The reality is, it’s now rare to find anyone who just wants to be ‘average,'” says Tim Sackett. “I grew up in a world where the majority were completely fine with just doing their job, going home and living their life, rinse and repeat. Now, everyone wants to be extraordinary. The problem is, if everyone is extraordinary, we all just are the same. If we are all the same, aren’t we all just average at that point? We are.”

Homeless and Skipping Meals: Kroger Employee Survey Reveals Shocking Wages, Conditions

Three-quarters or Kroger employees are food-insecure, according to new research. What’s more, “[a]bout 86 percent of respondents said Kroger was their lone source of employment and income. On average Kroger workers make $29,655 annually, or approximately $16,100 less than an annual living wage if the company paid $22 per hour.”

11 Trends that Will Shape Work in 2022 and Beyond

We’ve been living through the greatest workplace disruption in generations and the level of volatility will not slow down in 2022…These realities will be layered on top of longer-term technological transformation, continued DE&I journeys, and ongoing political disruption and uncertainty.”

Why Some Workers Are Getting All the Covid Tests They Need

“The testing available to a small number of white-collar professionals underscores the difference between their pandemic experience and that of other Americans, putting them at an advantage over many, including workers at small businesses without the means to procure testing kits for their staffs. Like personal protective equipment and vaccines, tests have become the latest example of how a tool to battle the pandemic can exacerbate social and economic divides.”

When Mental Health Struggles Disguise Themselves as Work Struggles

“A senior manager of sales called me and said, ‘Kayla, I need you. We have an employee screaming at her manager in a conference room and I don’t know how to diffuse this. Everyone can hear her.’ By the time I made it to the sales floor, the employee had stormed out and left for the day. After debriefing with the management team, I learned the following…”

Rewards Help Memory During Learning (But Not Later)

“Do potential rewards influence how much you remember about situations? If so, do you have to find out about those rewards when you first encounter the information, or can you find out about the rewards at the time that you are going to retrieve the information?”

Read the most interesting HR stories of past weeks here.


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Thanks for reading!

This article is part of a series called The Most Interesting HR Stories of the Week.