The Fran Ryan Center celebrated its grand opening in Olde Town East on Wednesday morning. Mayor Andrew Ginther and other city ...
A South Carolina farm owes more than $338,000 in back wages after the US Department of Labor found it liable for illegal ...
U.S. applications for unemployment benefits fell to their lowest level in nearly a year last week, pointing to a still ...
HARTFORD, Conn. (WTNH) — Gov. Ned Lamont delivered his seventh State of the State address for Connecticuct Wednesday afternoon. Read Lamont’s full address, as prepared, below: ...
Cargo could stop flowing at East and Gulf Coast ports, which handle most imports, if a union and an employers’ group can’t ...
The Pikes Peak Workforce Center has $220,000 available in federal Economic Development Funds to award to companies in El Paso ...
Economic data out Wednesday showed the pace of hiring in the US economy continued to but layoffs remain low, keeping the US labor market in a 'no hire, no fire' stasis.
Wall Street sees modest moves amid inflation and interest rate concerns, with the S&P 500 down 0.1% and the Dow Jones losing 115 points. Fed Governor Waller anticipates further rate cuts in 2025.
(CBS DETROIT) - Baker College, which has five campuses in Michigan, is facing a $2.5 million fine as part of a settlement with the U.S. Department of Education.
U.S. businesses are benefitting from hybrid work, fewer meetings, better AI use, and more startups, increasing total output and offsetting post-pandemic wage increases.
Ahead of hiring numbers due out Friday, the Labor Department said the November jump in job openings, up from 7.8 million the month before, shows companies still need workers.