Teacher with breast cancer must pay for sub | Oil and gas companies try new tack to entice younger talent | Uber, Lyft drivers call strike successful
Created for [email protected] |  Web Version
May 10, 2019
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Teacher with breast cancer must pay for sub
A teacher in San Francisco who is on medical leave because she has breast cancer has been informed the cost of a substitute teacher will be deducted from her salary, in accordance with state law. Teachers can draw from a sick leave bank for a maximum of 85 days without a loss of salary.
CNN (5/9) 
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Recruiting & Retention
Oil and gas companies try new tack to entice younger talent
Technology, workplace flexibility and other benefits are being used by oil and gas producers to woo younger potential employees. "A lot of them want to know that they are creating value and being valued," says Taylor Shinn, vice president of ventures and growth at Baker Hughes.
Houston Chronicle (tiered subscription model) (5/9) 
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Leadership & Development
PBM-Plan sponsor relationships may not look different in a post-rebate world
With an outcry for greater prescription affordability, state and federal entities are taking action. At the federal level, CMS has proposed a rule change that removes rebates from pharmacy benefit managers (PBM)s. Will that really improve transparency and lower costs? Download the whitepaper.
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Benefits & Compensation
Wages are growing, but not like in the past
US wage growth is outpacing inflation but lags that seen in previous expansion cycles. Lower-paying jobs are seeing the biggest wage gains, with average bartender wages up 9.6% over the past year.
Axios (5/4) 
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The HR Leader
How should companies handle religious accommodations?
Religious accommodations in workplaces can be a thorny legal issue, but managers should be concerned primarily with making reasonable accommodations and following any written processes, says Harvard Business School professor Derek van Bever. "When somebody feels not only not accommodated but insulted by your approach to their religious convictions, that's a real recipe for escalation," he says.
Harvard Business School Working Knowledge (5/7) 
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Workplace Chatter
Police find baby alligator hidden in Fla. woman's pants
Police find baby alligator hidden in Fla. woman's pants
(Charly Triballeau/AFP/Getty Images)
During a traffic stop when a Florida sheriff's deputy pulled over a man and a woman for ignoring a stop sign, the officer found that the pair had illegally collected 41 turtles, which were found in a backpack. When the deputy asked the woman whether she had anything else on her person, she took a 1-foot-long baby alligator out of her yoga pants.
Miami Herald (tiered subscription model) (5/7) 
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All you need is one person to say yes to an idea.
Joy Mangano
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