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Showing posts with label labor news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label labor news. Show all posts

DOL celebrates ADA anniversary with new disability site

Marking the 19th anniversary of the signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) the Department of Labor (DOL) yesterday announced the re-name and re-launch of its disability-related informational website, Disability.gov.

The improved site, managed by the DOL, is designed to better inform and serve the more than 50 million Americans with disabilities, along with their families and friends, veterans, employers, educators, caregivers and anyone interested in disability-related information.

"The Department of Labor is pleased to be the managing partner of Disability.gov and to help advance the independence and full participation of people with disabilities in the workforce, the classroom and their communities," said Kathleen Martinez, assistant secretary for the Labor Department's Office of Disability Employment Policy (ODEP).

Disability.gov has pulled together content from 22 federal agencies and utilizes social media tools that enable user interaction. Visitors can sign up for personalized news and updates, participate in online discussions and suggest new resources for the site.

The DOL has also set up a Twitter feed, RSS feeds, a blog, social bookmarking and a user-friendly way to access information on such topics as employment and job accommodation. The Department has plans to add more tools in the coming months.

"Far more than just a directory of federal resources, Disability.gov is a meeting ground for Americans to learn, respond and communicate about a wealth of critically important disability-related topics," said Secretary of Labor Hilda L. Solis. "The new site has been vastly enhanced to provide more information in as efficient and interactive setting as possible."

Read the DOL press release and visit Disability.gov for more information.
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HR survey shows more slashing salaries, less layoffs

Eight out of ten companies continue to cut labor costs, most by reducing salaries, worker hours, perks, and using furlough or forced vacations, according to a survey released yesterday by Challenger, Gray and Christmas.

According to the report, more than half (52%) of human resources executives surveyed in May said their companies had decided to slash or freeze pay, more than double the 27% of companies using the same cost-cutting techniques in January.

Executives listed as many as 13 different measures they’re currently using to cut expenses, but they’re not necessarily using these techniques in place of layoffs. Survey results revealed that the companies which had gone through layoffs were more likely to use cost-cutting methods than companies that had not.

Slashing benefits, pay, and perks allows companies to lower their labor costs without cutting workers. Layoffs can create a major challenge when the economy begins to recover and employers are short on trained workers. "It is a lot easier to restore compensation and benefits that it is to rehire and retrain workers when the economy improves," says John Challenger, chief executive of Challenger, Gray and Christmas. (U.S. News & World Report)

The percentage of employers making permanent cuts fell since the beginning of the year, from 56% in January to 43% in May, according to the survey. Altogether, 86% of executives said their companies were implementing cost-cutting measures, which is slightly better than in January when 92% of organizations were slashing costs.

Has your company been able to avoid layoffs by implementing other cost-cutting measures, such as salary reductions or freezes? Leave a comment and let us know what worked for your organization.
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