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Microsoft to Pay $14.4 Million to Resolve Leave Discrimination Claims in California
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Inc. - Business
Microsoft Settles Leave Discrimination for $14 Million
Employees who took leave for childbirth, disability, or to care for sick family members got lower bonuses and bad performance reviews.Microsoft -
ABC News - Tech
Microsoft will pay $14M to settle allegations it discriminated against employees who took leave
Global software giant Microsoft Corp. will pay $14.4 million in California to settle allegations that it discriminated against employees who took protected leave from workMicrosoft -
CNBC - Business
Microsoft reaches settlement in California over claims it punished employees for taking protected time off
Microsoft has agreed to pay $14.4 million to settle claims that the company unfairly treated California employees who took protected time off.California -
NBC News - Top stories
L.A. to pay $21M to settle claims over botched fireworks detonation by police 3 years ago
Los Angeles will pay more than $21 million to settle claims by residents of a neighborhood where police bungled the detonation of a cache of illegal fireworks three years ago, injuring 17 people and displacing dozens of others. -
Inc. - Business
Gig Work Company Settles With FTC for $7 Million Over Misleading Employees About Pay
"Operating in the 'gig' economy is no license for evading the law," Federal Trade Commission head Lina Khan tells Arise Virtual Solutions. -
The Wall Street Journal - World
How DEI Becomes Discrimination
The NIH First program wasn’t supposed to involve outright preferences. Public records show how that’s worked in practice. -
The Wall Street Journal - World
The head of America's biggest retail bank, Chase Bank, has a warning for its 86 million customers: Prepare to pay for your bank accounts.
The head of America’s biggest retail bank, Chase Bank, has a warning for its 86 million customers: Prepare to pay for your bank accounts. -
The Wall Street Journal - World
Discover in Settlement to Resolve Card Product Misclassification Suit
Discover increased its liability to provide refunds as a result of the misclassification to $1.2 billion, which is expected to cover all payments under the settlement, the company said. -
MarketWatch - Business
‘She won’t be happy until he’s in a homeless shelter’: My sister wants our father to refinance his $1.2 million home to pay off her $120,000 debt
“My father worked hard his entire life in public transport and retired about seven years ago.”
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Iran's Voters Elect Their First Reformist President in Two Decades
Fear of a hard-line alternative drove higher turnout for a candidate who pledged to rein in the morality police and resume nuclear talks.Iran -
The Wall Street Journal - World
News Quiz for July 6, 2024
Test your knowledge of the week’s events as reported in The Wall Street Journal. -
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After the Lockdown Years, Teens Want One Thing From Their Jobs: Friends
Isolation during the pandemic has unleashed a young generation of workers as eager for social interaction as they are for cash. ‘I don’t care how much I get paid. I love it here.’ -
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A New Political Question: What's Normal Aging, and Does It Mean Decline?
Sometimes, aging is a steady deterioration. Other times, the fall can be rapid. -
The Wall Street Journal - World
The Challenge of Building a New Plant: Paying the Electric Bill
Century Aluminum is betting that new sources of renewable energy will enable it to build the first U.S. smelter since 1980.