A Jacksonville workforce executive explains why the March hiring numbers look stronger than they actually are, and what employers should focus on instead of chasing growth.
On March 26, Tyler Bragg was sworn in as interim city manager during a special Oak Hill City Council meeting. He replaced ...
Savannah Guthrie returned to the “Today” show anchor chair on Monday, April 6, 2026, for the first time since her mother, ...
General Mills will eliminate 163 jobs as it permanently closes a Missouri pizza crust plant in St. Charles this summer, ...
LinkedIn is facing mounting privacy questions after an investigation branded “BrowserGate” alleged the Microsoft-owned professional network scans thousands of browser extensions and gathers detailed ...
Harvard University is now offering six free online courses in AI, programming, and web development, giving learners worldwide ...
We asked for your thoughts after Saturday's FA Cup game between Manchester City and Liverpool. Here are some of your comments ...
Forty-nine women and men serve in Nebraska's unique, one-house Legislature. They are citizen legislators, their jobs ...
LinkedIn runs a hidden JavaScript script called Spectroscopy that silently probes over 6,000 Chrome extensions and collects ...
Does this sound like you? Women over 50 spend billions of dollars on skin care each year, hoping for the best. Unfortunately, ...
Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg didn’t have to use that many words in his latest assessment of how his ...
American employers added a surprisingly strong 178,000 new jobs last month, rebounding from a dismal February. And the unemployment rate dipped to 4.3%. The Labor Department reported Friday that hirin ...